Gas exchange Flashcards
What 4 factors affect gas exchange?
Surface of the alveoli
Thickness of the membrane (diffusion distance)
Concentration gradient
Solubility of the gas
What is dead space?
Areas of the lungs that are ventilated but not perfused
What is anatomic dead space?
Tree of the trachea, bronchi and bronchioles that don’t participate in respiration
What is alveolar dead space?
Caused by ventilation/perfusion mismatch in which the gases haven’t been exchanged
What is physiological dead space?
Alveolar dead space + Anatomical dead space
What are the consequences of dead space?
At the end of expiration the dead space is filled with bad air and this is pulled into the alveoli during inspiration. During expiration the first air expelled is dead air
What is the difference in the composition of air in the trachea compared to dry air?
In the trachea the air is moist so the partial pressure of water increases and the partial pressure of oxygen decreases
What is the difference in the composition of air in the alveolar compared to dry air?
Partial pressure of oxygen decreases and partial pressure of CO2 increases due to the mixing of old and new air
Why does venous blood have a reduced partial pressure compared to arterial blood or dry air and why is this useful?
we produce less CO2 for the same amount of oxygen used due to the respiratory quotient of the metabolites. This is useful because it allows pneumothorax to resolve spontaneously because gases will move from a high to low concentration, so fluid in pneumothorax will drain into venous circulation
What is Dalton’s law?
Gases contribute to pressure according to the percentage of composition
Is CO2 more soluble than O2?
Yes by 20x
If oxygen and CO2 were in different compartments at the same partial pressure which one would have the higher net amount of molecules?
CO2 would have higher amount because it is more soluble
How is the diffusion capacity of the lung optimised?
By the cell shape of the alveolar cell type I and fused basement membrane
What does the diffusion capacity of the lung dependent on?
The nature of the tase –> solubility
What are the 2 reasons for limited gas transfer?
Diffusion and perfusion