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Gas exchange Quiz • • • • Surfactant is decreased in: 1. Term babies 2. Glucocorticoid therapy 3. Ventori mask short term oxygen therapy. • 4. Smokers • 5. Abdominal surgery. • 4 • Inspired air will be saturated with water vapor in the lungs decreasing PO2 in alveoli. Insp. air EXP. air Po2 116 PCo2 32 PH2O 47 PN2 565 PO2 158 PCo2 0.3 PO2 100 PH2O 5.7 PCo2 40 PN2 596 PH2O 47 PN2 573 Gas transport between lungs and tissues PO2 PCO2 Inspired PO2 158 PCO2 0.3 Vein Alveolar air 40 100 46 40 Expired PO2 116 PCO2 32 Arterial air 95 40 PH2o 47 47 47 PN2 573 573 573 Tissues Co2 O2 O2 diffuses out of alveolar gas into the blood stream and Co2 diffuses into the alveoli from blood. Diffusion across alveolo capillary membrane made up of pulm. epithelium, capillary endthelium and their basement membrane. Diffusion capacity of the lung for a given gas is directly proportionate to the alveolocapillary membrane area and inversely proportion to its thickness. Gas transport Prof. Omer Abdel Aziz O2 transport 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. O2 delivery to a tissue depends on: O2 entering lungs. Adequacy of gas exchange. Blood flow to tissues. Capacity of blood to carry O2. Factors affecting O2 diffusion are: thickness, solubility, Po2. Carriage of O2 1. Dissolved in plasma (2%): amount dissolved is proportionate to O2 tension at Po2 100 0.3ml dissolved / 100ml blood while at Po2 40 only 0.12ml / 100ml (venous). Dissolved O2 reaches the tissue, imp for cornea and cartilages. 2. Combined with Hb in red cells 98% Hb has 4 sub units attached to 4 haem moieties each is formed from porphyrin and ferrous iron,each of the 4 ferous ions can bind with one O2 molecule. Hb4 + O2 ↔ Hb4 O2 Hb4O2 + O2 ↔ Hb4O4 Hb4O4 + O2 ↔ Hb4O6 Hb4O6 + O2 ↔ Hb4O8 Each combination enhance the next. The amount of O2 combined with Hb is tension dependent but the relation is a sigmoid one and called O2 dissociation curve. R. (relaxed state ) chain away from each other . T ( tense state) globin chains close to each other . • With Hb of 15 g/dL , arterial blood contains 19.8 ml/dL, in venous blood (75% sat.) 15.2 ml/dL, so 4.6 ml O2 from each deciliter ( 250 ml O2 delivered to tissues per min). • Amount of O2 depend on Hb level. Oxygen dissociation curve Prof. Omer Abdel Aziz • Oxygen dissociation curve is the relation of the % saturation of Hb to the level of PO2 in mm Hg. • At PO2 100 sat. is 97.5%, at PO2 40 sat. is 75%. Decreased affinity of Hb: shift to the right • Shift of O2 dissociation curve to the right occur in: • Arise in temp. • A fall in pH ( PCo2)(Bohr effect). • 2.3 diphosphoglycerate in red cells. • Higher PO2 is required for Hb to bind O2. Increased affinity: Shift to the left: • 1. Low temp. • 2. High pH. • 3. Decreased 2,3,diphosphoglycerate. • PO2 above 100 will not increase saturation. • At PO2 60 Hb is 89% saturated. • A steep drop of saturation below PO2 60. O2 Dissociation curve 100 - Temp Saturation of Hb Percentage O2 PH Temp PH 30 2.3. DPG - 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Po2 mm Hg Po2 % Dis. 10 13.5 0.03 40 75 0.12 60 89 0.15 100 97.5 0.3 2,3 diphosphoglycerate (2,3 DPG ) • A large amount in RBCs, formed from 3- phosphoglyceraldehyde a product of glycolysis. • It is an anion which binds with Hb and releases O2. Half life 6 h. Factors affecting 2,3 DPG: • 1. Low pH ( acidosis ) decreases 2,3 DPG. • 2. Thyroid hormone, growth hormone, androgen leads to increased 2,3 DPG concentration. • 3. Exercise increases 2,3 DPG after 60 min. • 4. High altitude increases 2,3 DPG releasing O2. Cont. • 5. Hb F ( alpha2 gama2) poor binding to 2,3 DPG leading to increased affinity to O2 and more O2 moves from mother to fetus. • 6. In blood banks 2,3 DPG decreases, shifting the curve to the left, increasing O2 affinity and less oxygen released ? • 7. Anemia can increase 2,3 DPG. Quiz • In inhabitants of high altitude the oxygen dissociation curve can shift to the right due to: • 1. Increased temperature. • 2. Increased 2,3 DPG. • 3. Decreased pH. • 4. Increased PCO2. • 5. Increased Hb. • 2 P50: • It is the partial press. Of O2 at which Hb is 50 % saturated. It is increased by: • 1. Thyroid hormones, growth H. & androgens. • 2. Exercise. • 3. High altitude. • 4. Increased temp. • 5. Decreased pH. • The higher the P50, the lower is the Hb affinity for O2. Myoglobin • It is an iron containing pigment in skeletal muscles. • Binds one molecule of O2. • Its curve to the left of Hb so it takes O2 from Hb. Quiz • • • • • • P50 is increased in: 1. Low temp. 2. Low PCO2 3. High pH. 4. Decreaed 2,3 DPG. 5. Thyrotxicosis. Gas exchange at the tissues: • By simple diffusion: PaO2 in capillaries is higher than tissues, so O2 diffuses to the tissues. PCO2 is higher in tissues, so CO2 diffuses into capillaries. Hypoxia: • Decreased O2 supply to the tissues produces hypoxia. Types: • 1. Hypoxic hypoxia: decreased PaO2 as in pulmonary and cardiac diseases, high altitude. Hypoxia cont. • 2. Anemic hypoxia: anemia, CO decrease Hb available to carry O2. • 3. Stagnant hypoxia: decreased blood flow as in shock. • 4. Histotoxic hypoxia: prevention of oxygen utilisation at tissues level eg cyanide. • Oxygen therapy can help in hypoxic hypoxia & slightly in anemic h. Quiz • • • • • • Hypoxia in shock is : 1. stagnant 2. hypoxic 3. histotoxic 4. anemic 5. neurogenic. CO2 Transport From tissues to lungs by plasma & RBCs: 1. Dissolved 10%. 2. Carbonic acid Co2 + H2o ↔ H2Co3 ↔ H+ HCO3, 70%, slow in plasma due to absence of carbonic anhydrase, more in RBCs: • Hco-3 diffuse and Cl- enters (Band3) Chloride shift in RBC more fluid enters increasing HCT. • H+ Buffered by Hb. 3.Combined to protein: Carbamino protein, carbamino- hemoglobin. Co2 • Co2 carried by blood independent on Pco2. • Oxy Hb shift curve to the right helps release of Co2 at alveoli (Haldane effect) Co2 In blood Hb Hb0 • Asphyxia: Decreased PaO2, increased PCO2. • Hypercapnia: increased PCO2. • Hypocapnia: decreased PCO2. Cyanosis • Definition: it is diffused bluish coloration of skin and mucus membranes due to presence of large amount of reduced Hb (5 g or more). • Types: • 1.Central: in heart failure, right to left shunts; cyanosis is general( tongue & extremities) • 2. Peripheral: flow of blood is slowed in capillaries as in cold, venous obstruction & heart failure. Thank you