haemoglobin Flashcards

oxygen dissociation curve: explain the key components of the oxygen dissociation curve and recall the factors which affect it

1
Q

what does oxygen-Hb dissociation curve show

A

O2 carrying capacity of Hb at different pO2

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2
Q

shape of oxygen-Hb dissociation curve and reason

A

sigmoid shape; binding of one O2 molecule facilitates second molecule binding (cooperative binding)

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3
Q

what is P50 and significance

A

partial pressure of O2 at which Hb is half saturated with O2, gives affinity of Hb variants for O2

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4
Q

oxygen-Hb dissociation curve: arterial vs venous

A

arterial is fully saturated, venous is 75% saturated (much lower partial pressure of O2)

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5
Q

oxygen-Hb dissociation curve: haemoglobin and situations which cause shift left and effect on oxygen delivery

A

HbF, less 2,3-DPG, higher pH, so binds oxygen more readily (greater O2 affinity) and gives up oxygen less readily

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6
Q

oxygen-Hb dissociation curve: haemoglobin and situations which cause shift right and effect on oxygen delivery

A

HbS, more 2,3-DPG, lower pH (high H+ and CO2), so binds O2 less readily (lesser O2 affinity) and gives up oxygen more readily

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7
Q

what does normal position of oxygen-Hb dissociation curve depend on

A

[2,3-DPG], pH, CO2 in red blood cells, structure of Hb

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