gas exchange and gas transport Flashcards

1
Q

what are the functions of the lung? 2

A
  • ventilation= movement of air in and out of the gut

- gas exchange= the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the airspace the alveoli and the blood

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2
Q

how is air distributed inside the lungs?

A

unevenly, lower zones are more compliant

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3
Q

what type of pressure is in the pulmonary circulation? 3

A
  • low pressure system
  • upright position is barely enough pressure to perfuse the apices of the lungs with overperfusion of the bases
  • otherwise known as ventilation/perfusion matching (V/Q)
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4
Q

what is the relationship between partial pressures of oxygen and carbon dioxide? 4

A
  • steady state condition- the amount of oxygen produced by the body and amount of oxygen absorbed depends upon the metabolic activity of the body
  • the respiratory quotient (RQ)= CO2 produced/ O2 absorbed
  • fat metabolism= 0.7
  • carbohydrate=1.0
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5
Q

explain the pressures of carbon dioxide? 3

A
  • if CO2 is produced at a constant rate in the body, then the partial pressure of CO2 (PCO2) of alveolar air (PACO2) is dependent on alveolar ventilation
  • with increase alveolar ventilation we decrease (PACO2)
  • with decrease in alveolar ventilation we increase (PACO2)
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6
Q

explain the pressures of oxygen? 4

A
  • partial pressure of oxygen (PAO2) also varies with alveolar ventilation
  • increase in alveolar ventilation increases PAO2
  • a big enough increase will allow the PAO2 to approach PO2
  • a decrease in alveolar ventilation will decrease PAO2
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7
Q

how does gas get into the blood? 2

A
  • diffusion through tissues is described as fick’s law
  • the rate of transfer of gas through a tissue is proportional to the tissue area and the difference in gas partial pressure between the two sides and inversely proportional to the thickness of the tissue
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8
Q

what is the effect local differences on V/Q? 3

A
  • in the normal lung, most alveoli receive V/Q in correct proportion
  • low V/Q= decreased ventilation relative to blood flow, increased arterial PCO2 and decreased PO2
  • high V/Q= increased ventilation relative to blood flow, decreased arterial PCO2 and increased PO2
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9
Q

what is the alveolar gas equation? 5

A
  • PAO2= P1O2-(PACO2/0.8)
  • summarises the relationship between PACO2 and PO2
  • pure underventilation leads to an increase in PACO2 and a proportionate fall in PAO2- type 2 respiratory failure
  • disturbance in V/Q matching leads to a fall in PAO2 with no change in PACO2- type 1 respiratory failure
  • both can occur concurrently- alveolar gas equation allows determination if there is an observed reduction in PAO2 is related to underventilation alone or whether there is an intrinsic lung tissue
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10
Q

what can we do now we know the PAO2? 4

A
  • unlike CO2 there is normally a difference between alveolar and arterial PO2
  • this is known as the alveolar-arterial (A-a) gradient
  • in healthy adults breathing in the A-a gradient is small
  • if the A-a gradient is bigger than this, the abnormality in the blood cannot be explained by a change in ventilation, therefore something abnormal must be going on
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