Oxygenation Physiology Flashcards
Hypoxemia
Insufficient oxygenation of the blood which will lead to a hypoxic state
•Hypoxemia always comes first and leads to overall hypoxia
Pulmonary Shunt
Alveoli are perfused with blood as normal, but ventilation(supply of O2) fails to supply the perfused region.
V/Q mismatch
V-Ventilation
Q-Perfusion/Flow (cardiac output)
-AKA- Venous admixture
*Could be a blood flow problem or poorly ventilated alveoli
V/Q mismatch (Ventilation)
•COPD
•Asthma
•Trauma
•Pneumonia
•ARDS
V/Q mismatch(Perfusion)
AKA- dead space ventilation
•Cardiogenic shock
•blood loss
•PE
Aerobic metabolism
Ability to metabolize(create energy/maintain life) using oxygen. Or an oxygen dependent system.
Oxidative Phosphorylation
(Cellular/Aerobic respiration)
You use 36 net ATP
Fick formula
(Measuring O2 consumption)
•Cellular uptake of O2
CvO2=[(1.34xHgBxSvO2)] + (PaO2x0.003)]
Hgb concentration has the biggest impact on O2 delivery
Anaerobic Metabolism
•Energy production without oxygen
•CO2 production in excess
* Lactic acid build up in the muscles can be a sign of insufficient amount of oxygen to produce energy
3 P’s of ETCO2
1- Pulse(do they have one)
2- Perfusion status(MAP<65?)
3- PH(is it low?) CO2 low, HCO3 high?
Oxyhemoglobin disassociation curve
*Tip- subtract 30 from SPO2 to get PaO2
Bohr Effect
Hemoglobins O2 binding affinity is inversely related to acidity and concentration of CO2
*Oxyhemoglobin curve- Bohr effect= Right shift. better than left shift. “Right for the patient
•Raised acid, Raised CO2, Raised temp, Raised 2-3DPG, and Raised PaO2.
•Respiratory & Metabolic acidosis patients will be a right shift patient.
Haldane effect
Increased affinity for Oxygen. Easy to pick up but doesn’t want to let go.
•Low temp, Low acid, Low 2-3DPG, Low PaO2.
•Respiratory and Metabolic alkalosis.
BAD SHIFT they need high amounts of PRBC’s
Quiz question:
Oxygen delivery is a product of what?
Answer:
SaO2, Hgb, cardiac output.
SaO2 is a more accurate reading of oxygen in the blood, 98% of oxygen attaches to hemoglobin, and Q moves blood around the body
Quiz Question:
Which conditions would cause a left shift of the oxy hemoglobin disassociation curve?
Answer:
Decreased levels of 2, 3 – DPG.
Left shift equals low DPG, temp, CO2 and Pa02.