Chapter 3 Flashcards
What is Fick’s Law of Diffusion? (conceptually)
- Rate of diffusion of a gas through a tissue slice is proportional to the surface area and the partial pressure difference
- Diffusion Rate is inversely proportional to the thickness of the tissue slice
- Diffusion rate is proportional to the solubility of the gas in the tissue but inversely proportional to the square root of the molecular weight
What is the rate of diffusion of gas through a tissue slice proportional to?
- surface area
- partial pressure difference
- solubility of the gas in the tissue
What is the diffusion rate inversely proportional to?
- thickness of the tissue slice
- square root of the molecular weight
What is the equation for fick’s law of diffusion?
Vgas/min = A/T x D x (P1-P2)
A= area of diffusion
T = Thickness of membrane
D = Diffusion Constant
(P1-P2) = Difference in partial pressure
D=Solubility/Square root of Mol. Wt.
How long do Red Blood Cells spend in the pulmonary capillary at rest?
- 0.75seconds
At rest, how long does it take the PO2 of blood to reach that of alveolar gas?
- 0.25seconds
- 1/3 of time in capillary
Why is it important that, at rest, it only takes blood 1/3 of the time in the capillary to reach PO2 of alveolar gas?
- Considerable reserve capacity for diffusion across the blood-gas barrier
What does exercise do to the red blood cell transit time in the pulmonary capillary?
- Reduces it
What is the diffusion process challenged by?
- exercise
- Alveolar Hypoxia
- Thickening of the blood-gas barrier
Why is Carbon Monoxide used to determine diffusion capacity?
- it’s uptake is diffusion limited
What is a normal diffusion capacity?
- 25ml/min/mmHG
What happens to diffusion capacity with exercise?
- Increases
How can the reaction rate of O2 with hemoglobin become a limiting factor in diffusion?
- Short time in capillary
What does diffusion across the blood-gas barrier and O2-HG reaction rate have in common?
- Similar resistance to uptake of O2
How can the reaction rate of CO be altered?
- Changing the alveolar PO2.