What breathing pattern is rapid and deep? Hypoventilation Eupnea Cheyne-Stokes Hyperpnea
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Eupnea is normal, good, unlabored breathing. Show more…
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Clinical terms for variations in respiratory rhythm are listed in the boxes below. Place each term in the proper location to identify the combination of factors (e.g. volume and rate) that characterizes each condition. A. (Click to select) (Hint: Permanent cessation of breathing) B. (Click to select) (Hint: Accelerated breathing) C. (Click to select) (Hint: Decreased ventilation that produces an increase in blood CO2) D. (Click to select) (Hint: Temporary cessation of breathing)
Crystal W.
When you suddenly travel to high altitude, you notice an unusual breathing pattern when you are resting. For a while you stop breathing completely; then suddenly you start breathing rapidly for a short time; then you stop breathing again. This can go on and on in a cyclical pattern called Cheyne-Stokes breathing. Think in terms of the changes in partial pressure gradients when you go to high altitudes and explain how the breathing control system could produce this breathing pattern.
Hyperventilation, or overbreathing, is breathing faster or deeper than necessary to meet the body's needs. Hyperventilation reduces the $\mathrm{CO}_{2}$ content of blood, but does not significantly increase the amount of $\mathrm{O}_{2}$ available to tissues. Why might this be so?
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