Ventilation and diffusion Flashcards
The conducting airways
– Cartilage, few smooth muscles
– Collapse rare
Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressures
• States that Total pressure (PTotal) of a mixture of gases is the sum of their individual partial pressures (Px)
Atmospheric Pressure (PB)
at sea level is 760mmHg or 101.325 kPa
relationship between atmospheric pressure and partial pressure
- If atmospheric pressure changes then partial pressure changes
- If proportion of gas changes its partial pressure changes
Henry’s Law
• States that the concentration of O2 dissolved in water ([O2]dis) is proportional to the Partial pressure (PO2) in the gas phase
Gas exchange between alveolar and blood: • O2 has to:
– dissolve in an aqueous layer
– diffuse across the membranes
– enter the blood
Gas exchange between alveolar and blood: Rate of diffusion is proportional to
– Partial pressure difference (∆P)
– Surface area (A)
– Solubility (D, diffusion coefficient)
– molecular mass (D, diffusion coefficient)
– Inversely proportional to tissue thickness (T)
Diffusion Limitations of Gas Exchange
• In oedema, T (thickness of barrier) increases
• Transit time through capillary may not be sufficient to complete full gas exchange
– gas exchange reduced
– More marked effect on O2 than CO2, due to greater solubility of CO2
Diffusion Limitations of Gas Exchange Emphysema
A reduced (breakdown of tissue and alveolar sacs) – Gas exchange reduced
Diffusion Limitations of Gas Exchange
pulmonary fibrosis
T increased (deposition of fibrotic tissue) – Gas exchange reduced
Diffusion Limitations of Gas Exchange
mucus
inflammation of airway, tumours, reduce gas entry – Gas exchange reduced
Altitude
- At altitude, atmospheric pressure is reduced
* Hence, PO2 is reduced
acute hysiological Adaptations to Altitude
– Hypoxia sensed by peripheral
chemoreceptors
– Ventilatory drive increases initially but blunted by central chemoreceptors that respond to decreased PaCO2 due to increased ventilation
– CO increases due to suppression of cardioinhibitory centre
adaptive Physiological Adaptations to Altitude
– Central chemoreceptors adapt so
ventilation rate continues to increase
– PaCO2 drops leading to respiratory alkalosis, kidneys compensate by reducing acid secretion blood pH normalises
– Alkalosis stimulates 2,3 DPG production – leads to rightward sift of O2 dissociation curve
• Acclimation blood
– Erythropoietin release stimulated
– Hb conc. increases to 200 g/L from 150 g/L