Lecture 15: (Exam III) Obstructions, Capnography, Blood Gas Physiology, Hemoglobin (Andy's Cards) Flashcards
What is the formula for Pouiseille’s equation?
whoops, deleted this. I’ll find the equation again.
As expiration starts, why is PCO₂ at 0 mmHg?
The first portion of expired air comes from the anatomical dead space and should have no CO₂ in it.
What should the End Tidal CO₂ be at the end of the plateau phase of clinical capnography?
40 mmHg
Where in the graph below would we see mixing of VD and VA gasses?
In the first upstroke of the waveform there is mixing of VA and VD air.
Where is the air coming from in the first second of the graph below?
VD. You can tell that its dead space air due to the lack of CO₂.
What should the End Tidal CO₂ be at the beginning of the plateau phase of clinical capnography?
38 mmHg
In a perfect situation, PETCO2, PACO2, and PaCO2 will all be equal to _______ mmHg.
40 mmHg
How will Alveolar Dead Space affect your capnography?
PETCO2 will be lower than 40 mmHg
CO₂ will be “diluted”.
Normally after gas exchange, our PACO₂ is about _______ if we bring in twice as much fresh air, PACO₂ should drop down to ________.
40 mmHg
20 mmHg
Arterial PCO2 will mirror the change in alveolar PCO2
A decrease in VT or RR will result in a buildup of _________.
PACO₂
The best way to maintain a stable PCO₂ on the capnograph is to make small adjustments to ________ rather than to adjustments with ________ on the ventilator.
The best way to maintain a stable pCO2 on the capnograph is to make small adjustments to VT rather than to adjust with respiratory rate on the ventilator.
Increasing RR will increase alveolar ventilation and dead space ventilation while increasing tidal volume will increase just alveolar ventilation.
Where are the blood gas sensors located?
Aortic arch
Carotid bifurcations
What happens when our blood gas sensors see we have an elevated PaCO₂?
The blood gas sensors will think there is a problem with ventilation or perfusion resulting in reflexive:
↑CO
↑MAP
↑RR
Tight PaCO₂ control will result in tight _____ ______ control.
blood pressure
If someone is hypertensive, what can you do with the ventilator to decrease blood pressure?
Blow off CO2 by either adjusting Vt or RR.
What is the PCO₂ in our lungs at FRC?
PCO₂ is 40 mmHg at FRC
What happens if we expire all of the CO₂ in our lungs?
All of the blood running through the lungs will unload massive amounts of CO₂ into the alveoli. This will result in a very low arterial PCO₂ resulting in decreased cardiac output.
The lungs keep a lid on this and prevent huge amounts of CO2 from being unloaded from the blood in between breaths.
If PACO₂ became 0, then PaCO₂ would….
Drop considerably
This constitutes loss of buffering capability, all of PaCO₂ will start to be exhaled by the lungs.
The higher the _________, the more CO₂ will be in the lungs to act as a buffer resulting in a more stable blood gas.
FRC
A lower FRC will have less CO2, less buffer, and more variation in blood gas.
What will PCO2 in the lungs drop to if 350 mL of fresh air is instantly brought into the lungs?
How will the lung PCO2 rise back up to 40 mmHg?
36 to 37 mmHg (Fresh air will dilute lung CO2 during inspiration)
As blood moves through the lungs and unloads CO2, the lung PCO2 will rise to 40 mmHg.
(53:00)
Calculate the concentration of PCO2 in the lungs at FRC.
Calculate the amount of CO2 in the lungs at FRC.
What will be the new concentration of CO2 if 350 mL of fresh air enters the lung?
What will be the new PCO2 in the lungs?
40 mmHg/ 760 mmHg = 0.05263
[CO2] = 5.26%
0.05263 x 3L = 157.89 mL of CO2
157.89 mL / 3350 mL = 0.0471
New [CO2] = 4.71%
760 mmHg x 0.0471 = 35.7 mmHg
New PCO2 = 36 mmHg
What happens during the slow rise of PCO2 from 38 mmHg to 40 mmHg?
CO2 is being unloaded from the blood into the alveoli.
What is PaCO2 of the pulmonary artery?
Can lung PCO2 exceed 40 mmHg?
45 mmHg
Yes, at the end of expiration, the lung PCO2 can exceed 40 mmHg if there is a delay in the next breath.
What will a catastrophic MI do to your capnograph?
MI will result in low cardiac output and low pulmonary blood flow, resulting in a big drop off in your end-tidal CO2.
If no carbonated blood is circulating, there will be no ETCO2. PE will do the same thing. Watch for big drop-offs in ETCO2.
Capnographs are very sensitive to ________.
moisture