January 12, 2016 - Hypoxemia and Gas Transport (UNFINISHED) Flashcards
Oxygen in the Blood
98% is bound to hemoglobin
2% is dissolved in plasma
Oxygen Dissociation Curve
Shifting the curve to the right will cause a lower hemoglobin affinity, causing it to unload easier and have an increased uptake of oxygen in the tissue. Things that will cause this right shift are an increase in temperature, an increase in CO2, an increase in acid.
Shifting the curve to the left will cause an increased hemoglobin affinity, leading to less oxygen unloading and a decrease of oxygen uptake at the tissue.
Carbon Monoxide
Binds to hemoglobin with a 240x greater affinity than oxygen.
Shifts the oxygen dissociation curve to the left.
Because of this, oxygen cannot bind and your tissues become hypoperfused and can lead to death.
Oxygen saturation meters cannot tell the difference between oxygen and carbon monoxide bound hemoglobin, so it is possible for a patient to show 99% oxygen saturation and then die from lack of oxygen.
Arterial and Alveolar PaCO2
They are essentially the same.
CO2 diffuses through tissue 20x faster than O2.
Arterial Hypoxemia
Low partial pressure of oxygen in the arterial blood.
Mechanisms that Lead to Arterial Hypoxemia
- Low inspired oxygen
- Hypoventilation
- Diffusion limitation
- Shunt
- V/Q mismatch