ABSTRACT

The study of respiratory mechanics concerns the motion of structures that

control the movement of air into and out of the lungs. One set of structures

controls intrathoracic pressure, which drives gas flow; these structures

comprise the chest wall. Another system maintains the patency of the

extrathoracic airway proximal to the glottis; the components of this system

comprise the upper airway. This chapter will describe the functional

consequences of anesthetic-induced alterations in the activation of skeletal

muscles that control the chest wall and upper airway (often referred to as

respiratory muscles). Anesthetics also have important effects on smooth

muscle lining the airways, which also regulates gas flow within the lungs.

This topic is reviewed elsewhere [1] and is beyond the scope of this chapter. Historically, simple observation of external respiratory system motion

provided a powerful tool to guide the proper administration of anesthesia

[2]. More recently, alterations in the control of respiratory muscles that lead

to changes in respiratory mechanics have been invoked to explain much of

the impairment of gas exchange observed during and after clinical anesthesia.

Thus, anesthetic-induced changes in respiratory muscle activation and

respiratory mechanics can have profound clinical consequences.