L19 Flashcards
What is the percentage of each gas pressure within the atmosphere?
- N2
- O2
- CO2
- h2O
- 78.6% nitrogen
- 20.9% for oxygen
- 0.04% of CO2
- 0.46% of H2O
What is the pressure and percentage of each gas in the ALVEOLI?
- N = 75.4% = p = 570 mmHg
- Oz = 13.2 % = p = 100 mmHg
- C02 = 5.2 % = p = 40 mmHg
- h2O = 6.2% = 47 mmHg
What is DALtons LAw?
It states that the pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is the sum of the pressure of each of the gas within the mixture
Can describe the pressure of the gases within the pulmonary circuit and how this ensure efficient exchange of CO2 and O2?
- in lungs = Blood returning from the tissues has Oxygen at very low pressure of 40, whereas in the alveoli the pressure of oxygen from atmosphere is 100, so oxygen moves down pressure gradient into capillary
- Co2 pressure from blood returning from tissue is 45 mmHg as working tissue produce c02 as waste, and in the alveoli is 40 mmHg, Co2 moves from high pressure CAPILLARY into low pressure alveoli
This makes blood in capillary to O2 100 mmHg, and Co2 in 40 mmHg
Hoe does pressure of CO2 and O2 ensure an efficient exchange in tissues?
- arteries bring in blood , with oxygen at 100 mmHg and Co2 at 40 mmHg
In tissues Oxygen is used up so in tissues O2 = 95
In tissues Co2 is PRODUCED so O2 = 45 mmHg
O2 moves from blood into tissue down pressure gradient
Co2 moves moves from tissue into blood down pressure gradient
What does Henry’s law state?
Amount of gas that dissolves in water depends on its solubility and partial pressure in air
What is the blood flow to tissues?
5L per minute
What is the blood flow to tissues?
5L per minute
What amount of O2 does haemoglobin approximately transport?
97%
What can affect the binding of O2 to haemoglobin?
- pH
- CO2
- temperature
- State of O2 binding to the Hb molecule
What does decrease in pH, increase in CO2 do to the dissociation curve? what is it called and how does it improve gas/O2 exchnage
- decrease in pH and increase in CO2 shift curve to the right
- it is called bohr shift
- They affect structure of haemoglobin making it easier to UNLOAD at tissues
How does TEMPERATURE affect the dissociation curve?
- working tissue, higher temp
- shift curve to the right
- more unloading of O2
What is 2-3 DPG and how does it affect the dissociation curve?
- ## 2-3 DPG
What 3 other type of haemoglobin do we have?
- Carboxyhaemoglobin
- Methaemoglobin
- Foetal haemoglobin
Carboxyhaemoglobin, what does it bind to?
haemoglobin binds to carbon MONOXIDE
- binds very tightly
- dramatically reduce ability of O2 to bind to haemoglobin