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Human Anatomy and Physiology Respiration: Gas exchange Gas transfer systems Components: 1. Breathing 2. Respiratory diffusion 3. Bulk transport 4. Cellular diffusion External respiration Internal respiration Dalton’s Law PT = P1 + P2 + P3 etc. Therefore each gas has a partial pressure (pgas) Pgas = % of total mixture Dalton’s Law Atmospheric air Gas N2 O2 CO2 H2O % 78.6 20.9 0.04 0.46 Partial pressure 597 159 0.3 3.7 760 Henry’s Law Gases dissolve into liquid in proportion to their partial pressure Equilibrium will be reached (e.g. gases in the lung) Gas state Liquid state (lung) (blood) 300 100 (fast) 250 150 200 (slower) (no movement) 200 Gas solubility Factors effecting: Temperature (not in humans) Solubility of gas Air: CO2 > O2(20th) > N2 (1/2) Would humans survive if air had more CO2 than O2? Alveolar gases Gas N2 O2 CO2 H2O Partial pressure 569 104 40 47 % 74.9 13.7 5.2 6.2 Atm. 78.6 20.9 0.04 0.46 760 At any point in time air in alveoli contains: Less O2, more CO2 & H2O Why is gas composition different? O2 diffuses into blood, CO2 in opposite direction Humid air in conductive pathway Air in alveoli a mixture of air from more than one breath How can humans alter gas composition? Increase rate and depth of breathing Vascular circuits Systemic Coronary Pulmonary Bronchial – to lungs from heart Gas pressure gradients Pressure gradients Oxygen pO2 in deoxygenated blood is 40 mmHg pO2 in alveoli is 104 mmHg Pressure gradients Carbon dioxide pCO2 in alveoli is 40 mmHg pCO2 in deoxygenated blood is 45 mmHg Alveoli 40 PCO2 O2 P 104 Deoxygenated blood 45 5 40 64 Pressure gradients Relatively the same amount of O2 and CO2 are exchanged. Why? Answer: Solubility Surface area Why is surface area important? Surface area in a human lung is 70m2 Factors decreasing surface area Emphysema (volume unchanged) Tumors, mucus Ventilation-perfusion coupling vasoconstriction Low ventilation Well perfused Poor ventilation Poor perfusion vasodilation High ventilation Poor perfusion High ventilation High perfusion Gas transport in blood Methods of transport Dissolved in plasma (3 ml per liter) Problem: C.O. would need to be 80 l/min Bound to a respiratory pigment (Hb) (200 ml per liter) Solution: Hb carries both O2 and CO2 simultaneously Hemoglobin structure O2 CO2 Oxy vs. deoxyhemoglobin Oxygen transport in blood The term percent saturation Deoxyhemoglobin: Hb is 75% saturated Hb-O2 affinity Decreasing affinity Decrease in pH (Bohr effect) Binding to 2,3 diphosphoglycerate Elevated temperature Increase in pCO2 75% 55% pO2 Oxygen transport Hypoxia: inadequate O2 to tissues Anemic: few RBC’s Ischemic: impaired or blocked blood circulation Histotoxic: body cells unable to use O2 even though enough delivered (cyanide) Hypoxemic: reduced arterial pO2 (CO2 poisoning) CO2 transport Ways to transport Dissolved in plasma (7 - 10%) Bound to Hb (20 - 30%) Bicarbonate ion (60 - 70%) CO2 transport from tissue CO2 transport into lungs