Respiratory System 3 Flashcards
Factors that govern the exchange of gases among the air, blood and tissues
Membrane thickness - the thinner the membrane, the faster the rate of diffusion.
Membrane surface area - the larger the surface area, the faster the rate of diffusion.
Pressure difference across the membrane (Difference in partial pressure between two membrane) - the smaller the different, the faster the rate of diffusion.
Identify normal partial pressures of O2 and CO2 in air, blood and tissue
Partial pressure of O2 Air and water = 104 mmHg Arterial Blood = 95 mmHg (75 mmHg to 100 mmHg) Venous Blood = 30 to 40 mmHg Tissue = 40 mmHg (or less)
Partial pressure of CO2 Air = 0.25 mmHg Arterial Blood = 40 mmHg Venous Blood = 46 mmHg (Around or more) Tissue = Around 45 mmHg
Describe O2 and CO2 transport
Air travels through the upper and then the lower respiratory structures
Oxygen enters the blood at alveolar-capillary interface and crosses into the capillaries by the process of diffusion
Oxygen is transported in blood dissolved in plasma or bound to hemoglobin inside RBC
Oxygen diffuses into the cells
Cellular respiration determines metabolic CO2 production
CO2 diffuses out of cells
CO2 is transported dissolved bound to haemoglobin
CO2 enters the alveoli at alveolar-capillary interface.
Describe the function of haemoglobin
Most O2 in blood transported bound to haemoglobin
Haemoglobin produces oxygen which supply to tissue more efficiently
Haemoglobin Increases Oxygen Transport
Hemoglobin must reversibly bind O2
- loading O2 in the lungs
- unloading O2 at the tissues
One O2 bound → induces conformational change in other subunits → bind O2 with greater affinity
Describe the physiological significance of the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve
A biochemical relationship indicating that the higher the partial pressure of O2 in the blood, the more O2 haemoglobin it can bind.
Haemoglobin can bind oxygen with high affinity at the alveoli but at the tissues it has low affinity for O2 enabling it to unload the oxygen where it is required.
Not a linear relationship but a sigmoidal relationship = initial binding is slow but the rate of binding of O2 to Hb increases, as the affinity of Hb for O2 increases until the Hb becomes saturates (plateu region) - known as cooperative binding
The concentration and movement of O2 and CO2 between air, lungs, the blood & tissues? (Fick’s, Dalton’s & Henry’s Law)
Exchange of O2 and CO2 between alveolar air and blood occurs via passive diffusion
Fick’s Law
Diffusion proportional to surface area, concentration (or partial pressure) gradient & permeability and inversely proportional to distance
Dalton’s Law
Each gas in a mixture exerts it own pressure, i.e. the partial pressure, proportional to its concentration in the mixture
Henry’s Law
Quantity of gas that dissolves in a liquid is proportional to the partial pressure and solubility coefficient
How O2 and CO2 are transported in the blood?
At lungs, diffusion of:
O2 from alveoli to blood
CO2 from blood to alveoli
At tissues, diffusion of:
O2 from blood to tissues
CO2 from tissues to blood
Oxygen enters the blood at alveolar-capillary interface and crosses into the capillaries by the process of diffusion
Oxygen is transported in blood dissolved in plasma or bound to hemoglobin inside RBC
Oxygen diffuses into the cells
Cellular respiration determines metabolic CO2 production
CO2 diffuses out of cells
CO2 is transported dissolved bound to haemoglobin
CO2 enters the alveoli at alveolar-capillary interface.
The physical and chemical factors that influence the haemoglobin-oxygen dissociation curve?
Effect of pH - known as the Bohr effect (mainly due to CO2)
Effect of temperature
Effect of Pressure of Carbon dioxide
Shifting of curve to right (Lower pH, Higher temperature, Higher PCO2)
- Reduced Hb-O2 affinity
- increasing unloading of O2 from Hb
Shifting of curve to left (Higher pH, Lower temperature, lower PCO2)
- Higher Hb-O2 affinity
- decreasing unloading of O2 from Hb
The relationship between CO2 and pH and the role of carbonic anhydrase?
Carbonic anhydrase is an enzyme that balances the pH of the blood and enables the breathing out of carbon dioxide.
In red blood cells carbonic anhydrase catalyzes the reaction
Convert carbon dioxide and water into into carbonic acid, which further breaks down into bicarbonate ions and protons (H+)
Carbon Dioxide + Water (Favoured at lungs) → Carbonic Acid → Bicarbonate ions and protons (H+) (Favoured at tissues)