Lecture 14 Unit 2 Flashcards
What two forms can O2 be transported in?
- dissolved in the plasma (1.5% of total
- bound to the protein hemoglobin (98.5%)
what does the extent to which O2 binds depend on?
the P(O2) in the plasma
what does the oxy-hemoglobin dissociation curve tell us?
the relationship between the extend of oxygen binding to hemoglobin and the P(O2)
What does the oxy-hemoglobin dissociation curve show us?
that the binding release from O2 from hemoglobin is critically dependent on the P(O2)
What does lung P(O2) exceed?
the P(O2) in the blood that is entering the pulmonary capillaries
What happens when lung P(O2) exceeds the P(O2) in the blood?
O2 diffuses into blood and binds to hemoglobin
how does tissue P(O2) become low?
the release of O2 from hemoglobin
What is the Bohr shift to the right caused by?
a reduction in blood pH, increases in blood PCO2 and increase in temperature
What is the Bohr shift to the left caused by?
an increase in blood pH, decreases in blood PCO2 and decreases in temperature
what is the importance of the Bohr shift?
the hemoglobins molecules will release more oxygen at any given PO2
What happens with hemoglobin at tissue capillaries?
the hemoglobin in blood flowing though these vessels will release oxygen more readily
How is CO2 transported?
it is released from active tissue cells then diffuses into the plasma and then into RBCs
what two substances are formed in RBCs?
H2CO3 and carbaminohemoglobin
how is 70% of total CO2 transported?
in plasma as bicarbonate ions
how is 23% of the CO2 transported?
carbaminohemoglobin