S3) Gas Exchange in the Lungs Flashcards

1
Q

Identify the 6 factors affecting the diffusion rate of a gas in a fluid

A
  • Pressure difference (ΔP)
  • Solubility of a gas in solution (S)
  • Cross-sectional area of the fluid (A)
  • Distance the gas molecules must diffuse (d)
  • Molecular weight of the gas (MW)
  • Temperature of the fluid (assume 37o)
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2
Q

Identify the equation for Fick’s first law of Diffusion

A
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3
Q

Which is more soluble between CO2 and O2?

A

Carbon dioxide (20x)

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4
Q

What is the result of CO2’s greater solubility?

A

Greater diffusion coefficient – rate at which a substance diffuses

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5
Q

What role does ΔP have in the diffusion of O2

A

Diffusion coefficient is compensated by differences in partial pressures i.e. larger ΔP compensates for slower diffusion of O2

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6
Q

In a diseased lung, the diffusion of which substance is predominantly impaired?

A

Oxygen gas exchange is more impaired than CO2 because of its slower diffusion rate

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7
Q

Identify the 3 components of the diffusion barrier

A
  • 5 cell membranes
  • 3 layers of cytoplasm
  • 2 layers of tissue fluid
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8
Q

How does the distance in the blood gas barrier change during inhalation?

A
  • Distance between blood and air (in alveoli) = 0.6 mm
  • Distance decreases during inhalation as lung distends
  • Allows fast and efficient diffusion
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9
Q

Diffusion resistance depends on 2 factors.

Identify them

A
  • Nature of barrier
  • Nature of gas
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10
Q

Describe how the nature of the barrier affects the diffusion resistance

A
  • Permeability = (D x S)/thickness of membrane
  • Larger molecules have small diffusion coefficients
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11
Q

Which substance diffuses faster, CO2 or O2?

Why?

A
  • O2 is smaller so greater diffusion coefficient
  • CO2 is more soluble

CO2 diffuses faster because gas exchange of O2 is a limiting step

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12
Q

Describe the gradients of partial pressure of O2 in the returning blood and alveoli

A

PO2 in alveolar gas > PO2 in returning blood

So, oxygen diffuses into blood

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13
Q

Describe the gradients of partial pressure of CO2 in the returning blood and alveoli

A

PCO2 in alveolar gas < PCO2 in returning blood

So, carbon dioxide diffuses out of blood

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14
Q

Identify 3 conditions which impair diffusion

A
  • Fibrotic lung disease
  • Pulmonary oedema
  • Emphysema
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15
Q

Explain how fibrotic lung disease impairs diffusion

A

Fibrotic lung disease: thickened alveolar membrane slows gas exchange

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16
Q

Explain how pulmonary oedema impairs diffusion

A

Pulmonary oedema: fluid in the interstitial space increases diffusion distance

17
Q

Explain how emphysema impairs diffusion

A

Emphysema: destruction of alveoli reduces surface area for gas exchange

18
Q

What is anatomical dead space?

A

- Anatomical deadspace is the volume of air which is inhaled that does not take part in the gas exchange because it remains in the conducting airways

  • Normally 0.15 L in adults
19
Q

What is alveolar dead space?

A

Distributive/alveolar deadspace involves air reaching the lungs that is not perfused or poorly perfused due to dead/damaged alveoli (0.12 L)

20
Q

What is physiological deadspace?

A

Dead space is the volume of a breath that does not participate in gas exchange (ventilation without perfusion)

Physiological dead space = anatomical + alveolar

21
Q

How can one calculate the dead space ventilation rate?

A

DSVR = Dead space volume x respiration rate

E.g. 0.15 x 15 = 2.25 L

22
Q

How can one calculate alveolar ventilation rate?

A

AVR = (tidal volume - dead space volume) x respiration rate

E.g. (0.5 - 0.15) x 15 = 5.25L

23
Q

How can one calculate lung perfusion?

A
  • Lung perfusion (Q) = RV output
  • It is the same as cardiac output (approx. 5 litres/min)
24
Q

What is the ideal value for V/Q ratio in the lungs?

A

V = Alveolar ventilation rate (approx. 5 l/min)

Q = Lung perfusion (approx. 5 l/min)

V/Q = 1 (ideally)

25
Q

An imbalance between alveolar ventilation and alveolar blood flow is described by ventilation-perfusion ratio.

Outline this

A
  • If VA is 0, but there is still perfusion, VA/Q = 0
  • If VA is normal, but perfusion is 0, VA/Q = infinity
26
Q

Define hypoxia and hypoxaemia

A

Hypoxia – low oxygen levels in body or tissues

Hypoxaemia – low pO2 in arterial blood

27
Q

What is cyanosis?

A

Cyanosis is bluish discolouration due to unsaturated haemoglobin

28
Q

Which parts of the body can be affected by cyanosis?

A
  • Can be peripheral (hands or feet) due to poor local circulation
  • Can be central (mouth, tongue, lips, oral mucosa) due to poorly saturated blood in systemic circulation
29
Q

Why can it be difficult to detect cyanosis?

A
  • Poor lighting
  • Skin colouration
30
Q

What does pulse oximetry do?

A

Detects level of Hb saturation by detecting difference in absorption of light between oxygenated and deoxygenated Hb

31
Q

What are the limitations with pulse oximetry?

A
  • Only detects pulsatile arterial blood
  • Ignores levels in tissues and non-pulsatile venous blood
  • Doesn’t say how much Hb present