Answer to Question 1
ANS: D
With no ventilation to remove carbon dioxide and restore fresh O2, the makeup of gases in these areas is like that of mixed venous blood (PO2 = 40 mm Hg; PCO2 = 46 mm Hg). The / is 0. Ve-nous blood entering areas with / ratios of 0 cannot pick up O2 or unload carbon dioxide and leave the lungs unchanged. For such areas to be distinguished from true anatomical shunts, exchange units with / values of 0 are called alveolar shunts. Although small anatomical shunts are normal, alveolar shunts are not.
Answer to Question 2
ANS: B
Farther down the lung, perfusion increases linearly in proportion to the hydrostatic pressure so the lung bases receive nearly 20 times as much blood flow as do the apexes.