CO2 Transport in the Blood Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 ways to transport CO2 in the blood? How much is transported with each method?

A
  1. Dissolved in plasma: 7%
  2. Bound to Hb: 23%
  3. Bicarbonate: 70%
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2
Q

What enzyme catalyzes the conversion of CO2 to bicarbonate?

A

Carbonic anhydrase

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3
Q

What happens to H+ and HCO3- levels during exercise?

A

H+ increases and HCO3- drops to restore equilibrium

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4
Q

What is the optimum blood pH for humans?

A

7.4

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5
Q

How does the amount of CO2 dissolved in the plasma compare for oxygenated and deoxygenated blood?

A

The same

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6
Q

How does the amount of CO2 bound to hemoglobin compare for oxygenated and deoxygenated blood?

A

More in deoxygenated blood

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7
Q

How does the carrying capacity of CO2 compare for oxygenated and deoxygenated blood?

A

Higher carrying capacity in deoxygenated blood

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8
Q

How is CO2 loaded on hemoglobin at the tissues?

A

Deoxygenation of hemoglobin at the tissues frees up binding spots, and CO2 is loaded as carbamino-hemoglobin

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9
Q

How is CO2 released from hemoglobin in the lungs?

A

Oxygen loading causes Hb to let go of the CO2

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10
Q

Where does the

CO2 + H2O H2CO3 H+ + HCO3- reaction occur?

A

Inside red blood cells

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11
Q

What is the membrane protein that sends bicarbonate across the cell membrane of red blood cells?

A

BandIII (an antiporter)

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12
Q

What is the mechanism of bicarbonate transport across the red blood cell membrane?

A

Chloride shift

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13
Q

What is the chloride shift?

A

BandIII brings one chloride ion into the red blood cell and send one bicarbonate out

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14
Q

What is a metabolon?

A

A group of enzymes inside a cell that work together to perform a function

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15
Q

What is happening with the chloride shift at the tissues?

A

CO2 diffuses into the blood, where carbonic anhydrase converts it to bicarbonate, and BandIII sends the bicarbonate into the plasma and brings in one chloride

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16
Q

What is happening with the chloride shift at the lungs?

A

BandIII sends one chloride out of the cell and brings in one bicarbonate, carbonic anhydrase converts it back to CO2, which diffuses into the alveoli and gets exhaled

17
Q

What are the curves on a pH-bicarbonate plot called?

A

Isopleths

18
Q

What does the pH-bicarbonate plot tell physiologists?

A

Allows them to visualize what will happen to pCO2, pH, and bicarbonate levels if one of them changes

19
Q

What is hyperventilation?

A

The loss of too much CO2 by increased ventilation that is greater than what is needed to remove metabolism produced CO2

20
Q

What happens to CO2, pH, bicarbonate levels, and proton levels during hyperventilation? Which way does the carbonic anhydrase reaction shift?

A

CO2 drops, pH increases, proton levels and bicarbonate levels drop. Reaction shifts to the left

21
Q

What happens to CO2, pH, bicarbonate levels, and proton levels during hypoventilation? Which way does the carbonic anhydrase reaction shift?

A

CO2 increases, pH drops, proton and bicarbonate levels increase

22
Q

What condition is caused by hyperventilation?

A

Respiratory alkalosis

23
Q

What condition is caused by hypoventilation?

A

Respiratory acidosis

24
Q

What is hypoventilation?

A

Too much CO2 is retained by alveolar ventilation that is insufficient to remove the CO2 produced by metabolism

25
Q

What is respiratory acidosis?

A

When ventilation can’t remove all the CO2 produced by metabolism, so the blood pH decreases

26
Q

What is respiratory alkalosis?

A

When there is more ventilation than what is needed to remove the CO2 produced by metabolism, causing the blood pH to increase

27
Q

What are metabolic acidosis and metabolic alkalosis?

A

The pH change is caused by changes in metabolism rather than ventilation

28
Q

What causes metabolic acidosis?

A

Lactic acid buildup and diarrhea

29
Q

What causes metabolic alkalosis?

A

Loss of protons from vomiting

30
Q

What do central chemoreceptors detect?

A

CO2 levels

31
Q

What do peripheral chemoreceptors detect?

A

O2 levels

32
Q

How does altitude affect blood pH and ventilation?

A

At risk of hyperventilation since the air has less oxygen, and the breathing rate increases to accommodate for that, so we are losing more CO2 than we have so blood pH increases until the kidneys produce more red blood cells to carry O2