pk4 Alveolar Gases and Diffusion Flashcards

1
Q

How much air mixes into the FRC per inspiration?

A

~350ml.

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2
Q

What is the average FRC?

A

2500ml.

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3
Q

What is the average total lung capacity?

A

6L.

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4
Q

What are the partial pressures of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the alveoli and arteries?

A
  • PAO2 = 13 kPa.

- PACO2 = 5 kPa.

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5
Q

What are the average mixed venous gas tensions of oxygen and carbon dioxide?

A
  • PVO2 = 5kPa.

PVCO2 = 6kPa.

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6
Q

What sets alveolar PCO2?

What is the equation for alveolar CO2 using these variables?

A

1 - Arterial flow of CO2.

2 - Alveolar flow.

  • PACO2 = 115kPa * (Arterial flow CO2 / Total gas flow in the alveoli).
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7
Q

Why is PaCO2 an effective clinical measure of adequacy of alveolar flow?

A
  • Because if total alveolar flow increases in proportion with arterial flow of CO2, then PACO2 (and hence PaCO2) can be maintained constant at 5kPa.
  • If PaCO2 falls below 5kPa then alveolar flow has not increased in proportion with arterial flow.
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8
Q

Why are the determinants of alveolar PO2 not the same as the determinants of alveolar PCO2?

A
  • Because inspired PO2 is not zero so must also be taken into account.
  • Otherwise the same as for PACO2.
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9
Q

What is the equation for alveolar O2?

A

PAO2 = PIO2 - ( 115kPa x (Arterial flow O2 / Total gas flow in the alveoli).

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10
Q

How thick is the alveolar-capillary membrane?

A

0.2 - 0.6 micrometers.

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11
Q

List the layers that comprise the alveolar-capillary membrane.

A

1 - Capillary epithelium.

2 - Basal lamina.

3 - Alveolar epithelium.

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12
Q

Concerning movement of gases across alveoli, through which phases must gases diffuse?

A

Gaseous and liquid phases.

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13
Q

What is Graham’s law?

What are its implications for the diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide through gas?

A
  • In a gaseous phase, the rate of diffusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of the mass of its particles (and is also dependent upon the partial pressure difference).
  • Since the relative mass of CO2 is 44 and the relative mass of O2 is 32, CO2 will diffuse 0.85x slower than O2 through gas.
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14
Q

What is Henry’s law?

What are its implications for the diffusion of gases through liquid?

A
  • Conc. of Gas = Partial Pressure x Solubility Coefficient (α).
  • Since the rate of diffusion through a liquid phase depends on the concentration gradient and, according to Henry’s law, a more soluble gas maintains a higher concentration difference, a more soluble gas will also diffuse quicker.
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15
Q

List the solubility values for oxygen and carbon dioxide.

How much faster will carbon dioxide diffuse through a liquid than oxygen?

A
  • αCO2 = 5.30 ml/LkPa
  • αO2 = 0.23 ml/LkPa
  • Carbon dioxide will diffuse 23x faster than oxygen in a liquid.
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16
Q

Why does carbon dioxide diffuse faster through the alveolar-capillary membrane than oxygen?

A

Despite carbon dioxide having a lower difference across the membrane than oxygen (1kPa vs 8kPa), carbon dioxide is more soluble and so diffuses through the liquid phase much quicker.

17
Q

Why is movement of CO across the alveolar-capillary membrane diffusion limited?

A
  • Because of the high CO-binding capacity of Hb.
  • Any CO diffusion across the membrane will be bound by Hb and so will not contribute to the partial pressure of CO in the blood.
  • Diffusion is therefore not fast enough to saturate the blood.
  • Therefore equilibration is not met before the transit time is over.
18
Q

Why is movement of N2O and O2 across the alveolar-capillary membrane perfusion limited?

A
  • Because of the high diffusion rate of N2O across the membrane.
  • N2O therefore quickly saturates the blood supply.
  • Equilibration is therefore met before the transit time is over.
19
Q

Define transit time.

A

The time that a red blood cell takes to flow through the pulmonary exchange interface.

20
Q

List 2 reasons for oxygen taking a longer time to equilibrate than normal.

A

1 - Exercise.

2 - Altitude.

21
Q

What is the equation for the flow of gas across a diffusion barrier?

A
  • Flow = d x (A/T) x (P1-P2).

- Where d = diffusability, A = area, T = thickness and P = partial pressure.

22
Q

What is DL?

How was this value measured?

A
  • The diffusion constant.
  • A combination of d, A and T.
  • Measured using CO since O2 has a variable P2 therefore is hard to measure (the P2 for CO is almost always 0 because of its high affinity for Hb).
23
Q

List 4 disturbances that reduce DL by reducing area.

A

1 - Loss of lung tissue.

2 - Airway obstructions.

3 - Capillary obstructions.

4 - Ventilation / perfusion mismatches.

24
Q

List 3 disturbances that reduce DL by increasing thickness / diffusion path length.

A

1 - Thickened alveolar-capillary membrane (e.g. fibrosis).

2 - Accumulation of lung fluid.

3 - Increased intracapillary distance (e.g. low haemoglobin).

25
Q

Define cyanosis.

A

Blue discolouration of the skin due to low oxygen saturation.

26
Q

How would a patient with reduced DL present?

A
  • Hypoxic with cyanosis that is aggravated by exercise.
  • Increased alveolar ventilation and decreased PaCO2.
  • Normal ventilatory capacity.