alveolar gas equation/oxygen deprivation/ V/Q Flashcards

1
Q

alveolar gas equation

A

PAO2 = PIO2 - PaCO2/R = 150mmHG - PaCO2/0.8

PA02 = alveolar PO2
PIO2 = PO2 in inspired air
PaCO2 = arterial PCO2
R=respitatoy quotient = CO2 produced/O2 CONSUMED

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2
Q

what is R in alveolar gas equation

A

R=respitatoy quotient = CO2 produced/O2 CONSUMED

normally is 0.8

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3
Q

PO2 in inspired air in see level (and why)

A

150mmHg
Ptotal (760) - correction because of trachea (47)
= 713
713 x 0.21 = 150 mmHg

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4
Q

A-a gradient:

equation

A

A-a gradient = alveolar PO2 - arterial PO2

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5
Q

A-a gradient - normal values

A

10-15 mmHg

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6
Q

increased A-a gradient may occur in ….

situations:

A

hypoxemia

causes include: shunting, V/Q mismatch, fibrosis (impairs diffusion)

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7
Q

oxygen deprivation in tissues - types

A
  1. hypoxemia
  2. hypoxia
  3. Ischemia
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8
Q

what is hypoxemia

A

decreased arterial PCO2

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9
Q

what is hypoxia

A

decreased O2 delivery to tissues

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10
Q

what is ischemia

A

loss of blood flow

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11
Q

causes of hypoxemia (divide by A-a gradient)

A

normal A-a gradient: a. high altitude, hypoventilation (eg opioid)
increased A-a gradient: a. V/Q mismatch b. Diffusion limitation (eg. fibrosis) c. Right-to-left shunt

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12
Q

causes of hypoxia

A
  1. HYPOXEMIA
  2. anemia
  3. decreased cardiac output
  4. CO poisoning
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13
Q

causes of ischemia

A
  1. impeded arterial flow

2. decreased venous drainage

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14
Q

V/Q means

A

ventilation/perfusion

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15
Q

V/Q ideally

A

ideally ventilation is matched to perfusion (V/Q = 1) for adequate gas exchange

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16
Q

V/Q lung zones and explanation

A

V/Q at apex = 3 –> wasted ventilation

V/Q at base = 0.6 –> wasted perfusion

17
Q

V/Q: P artery (Pa) P venous (Pv) P alveoli (PA)

bigger, smaller in the apex of the lung

A

PA>Pa>PV

18
Q

V/Q: P artery (Pa) P venous (Pv) P alveoli (PA)

bigger, smaller in the middle of the lung

A

Pa>PA>PV

19
Q

V/Q: P artery (Pa) P venous (Pv) P alveoli (PA)

bigger, smaller in the base of the lung

A

Pa>PV>PA

20
Q

V/Q=0 - explanation

A
airway obstruction (SHUNT)
100% O2 does not improve alveolar PO2
21
Q

V/Q=0 –> if 100% O2–> alveolar PO2

A

does not improve

22
Q

V/Q = infinity

A

blood flow obstruction (physiologic dead space)

23
Q

assuming 100% O2?

A

It improves PaO2

24
Q

V/Q – > response to exercise

A

increased cardiac output –> vasodilation of apical capillaries –> V/Q ratio approaches 1

25
Q

organism that thrive in high O2- area in the lungs

and example

A

apex

ex. TB

26
Q

V, Q, V/Q ratio distribution in apex, base and middle of the lung

A

V/Q as apex as higher (0.6 at base, 3 at apex)
Both V and Q are greater at the base, but the increasing of Q from apex to base is greater from the increasing of V and thats why V/Q is decreased in the base (0.6)

27
Q

hypoventilation causes hypoxemia - why

A

hypoventilation –> increased PaCO2–>increased PACO2 –> decreased PAO2

28
Q

PaCO2 - equation

A

PaCO2 = K x VCO2 / VA
VA: alveolar ventilation
VCO2: rate of elimination

29
Q

increased VCO2 - situations

A

fever
exercise
overconsumption of carbohydrates
chill tetanus