CO2 transport Flashcards

1
Q

____% CO2 physically dissolved

A

10%

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2
Q

____% CO2 bound to Hg (carbamino hemoglobin, HbCO2) at ______ portion not at heme portion

A

30%

globin

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3
Q

____ % bound to Hg (carbamino hemoglobin, HbCO2) at _____ portion not at heme portion

A

30

globin

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4
Q

60% as

A

bicarbonate (HCO3-)

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5
Q

Carbonic anhydrase (HCO3-) exchanged by

A

chloride Cl-

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6
Q

Carbon dioxide transport in the blood.

A

Carbon dioxide (CO2) picked up at the tissue level is transported in the blood to the lungs in three ways: (1) physically dissolved, (2) bound to hemoglobin (Hb), and (3) as bicarbonate ion (HCO3−). Hemoglobin is present only in the red blood cells, as is carbonic anhydrase, the enzyme that catalyzes the production of HCO3−. The H+ generated during the production of HCO3− also binds to Hb. Bicarbonate moves by facilitated diffusion down its concentration gradient out of the red blood cell into the plasma, and chloride (Cl−) moves by means of the same passive carrier into the red blood cell down the electrical gradient created by the outward diffusion of HCO3−. The reactions that occur at the tissue level are reversed at the pulmonary level, where CO2 diffuses out of the blood to enter the alveoli.

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