ARDS
How
Do the Lungs Work?
To understand ARDS, it is helpful to understand
how your lungs work.
Normal lung function:
A slice of normal lung looks like a pink sponge—filled with
tiny bubbles or holes. Around each bubble is a
fine network of tiny blood vessels. These
bubbles surrounded by blood vessels give the
lungs a large surface to exchange oxygen (into
the blood where it is carried throughout the
body) and carbon dioxide (out of the blood).
This process is called gas exchange.
Healthy lungs do this very well.
Here's how normal
breathing works:
-
You breathe
in air through your nose and mouth. The air
travels down through your windpipe (trachea)
through large and small tubes in your lungs
called bronchial tubes. The
larger ones are bronchi (BONK-eye),
and the smaller tubes are bronchioles
. Sometimes we use the word "airways" to
refer to the various tubes or passages that
air must travel from the nose and mouth into
the lungs. The airways in your lungs look
something like an upside-down tree with many
branches.
-
At the ends
of the small bronchial tubes, there are
groups of tiny bubbles called air sacs or
alveoli . The bubbles have very thin
walls, and small blood vessels called
capillaries are next to them. Oxygen passes
from the air sacs into the blood in these
small blood vessels. At the same time,
carbon dioxide passes from the blood into
the air sacs.
Effects of ARDS:
In ARDS, the tiny blood vessels leak too much
fluid into the lung. This results from toxins
(poisons) that the body produces in response to
the underlying illness or injury. The lungs
become like a wet sponge, heavy and stiffer than
normal. They no longer provide the effective
surface for gas exchange, and the level of
oxygen in the blood falls. If ARDS is severe and
goes on for some time, scar tissue called
fibrosis may form in the lungs. The scarring
also makes it harder for gas exchange to occur.
People who develop ARDS need extra oxygen and
may need a breathing machine to breathe for them
while their lungs try to heal. If they survive,
ARDS patients may have a full recovery. Recovery
can take weeks or months. Some ARDS survivors
take a year or longer to recover, and some never
completely recover from having ARDS.