Title: Oxygen Transport:
1Oxygen Transport
- A Clinical Review
- Burn-Trauma-ICU
- Adults Pediatrics
- Bradley J. Phillips, M.D.
2The First Concern
- the first concern in any life-threatening
illness - is to maintain
- an adequate supply of oxygen
- to sustain oxidative metabolism
- Marino 2nd ed.
3Context
- The human adult has a vascular network that
stretches over 60,000 miles - More than twice the circumference of the earth
- 8,000 liters of blood pumped per day
- Principle of Continuity
- Conservation of mass in a closed hydraulic system
- the volume flow of blood is and must be the same
at all points throughout the circuit
4Flow Velocity Cross-sectional Area
5Respiratory Gas Transport
- Respiratory function of blood
- Dual system
- Transport delivery of oxygen TO the tissues
- Transport delivery of carbon dioxide FROM the
tissues - Oxygen is the most abundant element on the
surface of this planetyet it is completely
unavailable to the cells on the interior of the
human system - the body, itself, acts as its own natural
barrier - Why ? (rememberoxygen-metabolites are toxic)
6Oxygen Radicals
The metabolism of oxygen occurs at the very end
of the electron transport pathway i.e.
oxidative phosphorylation within the
mitochondrial body
7Antioxidant Therapy
Selenium (glu. Peroxidase) Glutathione (acts via
reduction) N-acetylcysteine (a glutahione
analog) Vit. E (blocks lipid peroxidation) Vit.
C (pro-oxidant to maintain iron as
Fe(II) Aminosteroids (? lipid peroxidation)
8the transport system for oxygen is separated into
4 componentstaken together, these form the
oxygen transport variables
9The Oxygen Transport Variables
- Oxygen Content CaO2
- Oxygen Delivery DO2
- Oxygen Uptake VO2
- Extraction Ratio ER
10Oxygen Content (1)
- the oxygen in the blood is either bound to
hemoglobin - or dissolved in plasma
- the Sum of these two fractions is called the
Oxygen Content - CaO2 the Content of Oxygen in Arterial Blood
-
- Hb Hemoglobin (14 g/dl)
- SaO2 Arterial Saturation (98 )
- PaO2 Arterial PO2 (100 mmHg)
11Oxygen Content (2)
- CaO 2 (1.34 x Hb x SaO2) (0.003 x PaO2)
- amount carried by Hb
amount dissolved in plasma - CaO2 (1.34 x 14 x 0.98) (0.003 x 100)
- CaO2 18.6 ml/dl (ml/dl vol 18.6 vol )
- at 100 Saturation, 1 g of Hb binds 1.34 ml of
Oxygen !
12Oxygen Content (3)
- Note that the PaO2 contributes little to the
Oxygen Content ! - Despite its popularity, the PaO2 is NOT an
important measure of arterial oxygenation ! - The SaO2 is the more important blood gas variable
for assessing the oxygenation of arterial blood ! - the PaO2 should be reserved for evaluating the
efficiency of pulmonary gas exchange
13Hemoglobin vs. PaO2 CaO2
- the trifecta
- Arterial oxygenation is based on 3 (and ONLY 3)
things - Hb
- SaO2
- PaO2
- A 50 reduction in Hb leads to a direct 50
reduction in CaO2 - A 50 reduction in PaO2 leads to a 20 reduction
in CaO2
14CaO2 why do we so often forget ?
- PaO2 influences oxygen content only to the
- extent that it influences
- the saturation of hemoglobin
- Hypoxemia (i.e. a decrease in PaO2) has a
- relatively SMALL impact
- on arterial oxygenation if the accompanying
change - in SaO2 is small !
15Oxygen Content (4)
- 35 yr old male s/p GSW to Chest
- Pulse 126 BP 164 / 72 RR 26
- Hb 12
- Hct 36
- ABGs pH 7.38 / PaO2 100 / PaCO2 32 / 96
Sat - Question What is this
- Patients Oxygen Content ?
16Oxygen Content (5)
- 35 yr old male s/p GSW to Chest
- Pulse 126 BP 164 / 72 RR 26
- Hb 12
- Hct 36
- ABGs pH 7.38 / PaO2 100 / PaCO2 32 / 96
Sat - Oxygen Content
- CaO2 (1.34 x Hb x SaO2)
- CaO2 ..
17Oxygen Delivery (1)
- DO2 the Rate of Oxygen Transport in the Arterial
Blood - it is the product of Cardiac Output Arterial
Oxygen Content - DO2 Q x CaO2
-
- Cardiac Output, Q, can be indexed to body
surface area - Normal C.I. 2.5 - 3.5 L/min-m2
- Bu using a factor of 10, we can convert vol to
ml/min
18Oxygen Delivery (2)
- DO2 Q x CaO2
- DO2 3 x (1.34 x Hb x SaO2) x 10
- DO2 3 x (1.34 x 14 x .98) x 10
- DO2 551 ml/min
- Normal Range (CO) 800 1000 ml/min
- Normal Range (CI) 520 - 720 ml/min/m2
19Oxygen Delivery (3)
- 35 yr old male s/p GSW to Chest
- Pulse 126 BP 164 / 72 RR 26
- H/H 12/36
- ABGs pH 7.38 / PaO2 100 / PaCO2 32 / 96
Sat - CO 4.8 CI 2.1
- Question What is this
- Patients Oxygen Delivery ?
20Oxygen Delivery (4)
- 35 yr old male s/p GSW to Chest
- Pulse 126 BP 164 / 72 RR 26
- H/H 12/36
- ABGs pH 7.38 / PaO2 100 / PaCO2 32 / 96
Sat - CO 4.8 (CI 2.1)
- Oxygen Delivery
- DO2 Q x CaO2 x 10
- DO2
21Oxygen Uptake (1)
- oxygen uptake is the final step
- in the oxygen transport pathway and it represents
the oxygen supply - for tissue metabolism
-
- The Fick Equation
- Oxygen Uptake is the Product of Cardiac Output
- and
- the Arteriovenous Difference in Oxygen Content
- VO2 Q x (CaO2 - CvO2)
22Oxygen Uptake (2)
23Oxygen Uptake (3)
- The Fick Equation
- VO2 Q x (CaO2 - CvO2)
- VO2 Q x (1.34 x Hb) x (SaO2 - SvO2) x 10
- VO2 3 x (1.34 x 14) x (.98 - .73) x 10
- VO2 3 x 46
- VO2 140 ml/min/m2
- Normal VO2 110 - 160 ml/min/m2
24Oxygen Uptake (4)
- 35 yr old male s/p GSW to Chest
- Pulse 126 BP 164 / 72 RR 26
- Hb/Hct 12/36
- ABGs pH 7.38 / PaO2 100 / PaCO2 32 / 96
Sat - CO 4.8
- SvO2 56
- Question What is this
- Patients Oxygen Uptake ?
25Oxygen Uptake (4)
- 35 yr old male s/p GSW to Chest
- Pulse 126 BP 164 / 72 RR 26
- Hb/Hct 12/36
- ABGs pH 7.38 / PaO2 100 / PaCO2 32 / 96
Sat - CO 4.8 (CI 2.1)
- SvO2 56
- Oxygen Uptake
- VO2 Q x (CaO2 - CvO2)
- VO2 Q x (1.34 x Hb) x (SaO2 - SvO2) x
10 - VO2 .
26Extraction Ratio (1)
- the fractional uptake of oxygen
- from the capillary bed
- O2ER derived as the Ratio of Oxygen Uptake to
Oxygen Delivery - O2ER VO2 / DO2 x 100
- O2ER 130 / 540 x 100 Normal
Extraction - O2ER 24 22 - 32
27Extraction Ratio (2)
- 35 yr old male s/p GSW to Chest
- Pulse 126 BP 164 / 72 RR 26
- H/H 36
- ABGs pH 7.38 / PaO2 100 / PaCO2 32 / 96
Sat - C0 4.8
- SvO2 71
- Question What is this
- Patients Extraction Ratio ?
28Extraction Ratio (3)
- 35 yr old male s/p GSW to Chest
- Pulse 126 BP 164 / 72 RR 26
- H/H 36
- ABGs pH 7.38 / PaO2 100 / PaCO2 32 / 96
Sat - C0 4.8
- SvO2 71
- Extraction Ratio
- O2ER VO2 / DO2 x 100
- O2ER ..
29Extraction Ratio (3)
- Questions
-
- 1. ER 16 , what does this imply ?
- 2. ER 42 , what does this imply ?
-
30Control of Oxygen Uptake
- the uptake of oxygen from the microcirculation is
a - set point that is maintained by adjusting the
- Extraction Ratio
- to match changes in oxygen delivery
- the ability to adjust
- O2 Extraction
- can be impaired in serious illness
31The Normal Response O2ER (1)
- The Normal Response to a
- Decrease in Blood Flow is an Increase in O2
Extraction - sufficient enough to keep VO2 in the normal range
- VO2 Q x Hb x 13.4 x (SaO2 - SvO2)
- Q 3 VO2 3 x 14 x 13.4 x (.97 - .73)
110 ml/min - Q 1 VO2 1 x 14 x 13.4 x (.97 - .37)
109 ml/min
32The Normal Response O2ER (2)
- The Drop in Cardiac Index is BALANCED by an
- Increased (SaO2 - SvO2) Differenceand VO2
remains Unchanged - Note the drop in SvO2 from 97 to 37 !!
- This association between SvO2 O2ER is the Basis
for SvO2 Monitoring - The Ability to Adjust Extraction is a feature of
all vascular beds - except the Coronary Circulation the Diaphragm !
33The DO2 - VO2 Curve (1)
34The DO2 - VO2 Curve (2)
- As O2 delivery decreases below normal, the ER
increases proportionally to keep VO2 constant - When ER reaches its maximum level (50 60),
further decreases in DO2 are accompanied by
proportional decreases in VO2 - Critical DO2
- The DO2 at which consumption becomes
supply-dependent - The point at which energy production within the
cell becomes oxygen-limited
35The DO2 - VO2 Curve (3)
- Flat Portion of the Curve
- VO2 Flow - Independent
- O2 Extraction varies in response to Blood Flow
(VO2 Constant) - Linear Portion of the Curve
- VO2 Flow - Dependent
- Indicates a defect in oxygen extraction from the
microcirculation - Extraction is fixed and VO2 becomes directly
dependent on Delivery - Critical Level of Oxygen Delivery
- The Threshold DO2 needed for Adequate Tissue
Oxygenation - If DO2 falls below this level, oxygen supply will
be sub-normal
36The DO2 - VO2 Curve (2)
37In the ICU
- The critical DO2 in anesthesized patients is
around 300 ml/min. - However, in critically-ill patients, the Critical
DO2 varies widely from 150 1000 ml/min - Leach et al. Dis Mon. 199430301-368
38Mixed Venous Oxygen
- By rearranging the Fick Equation, the
determinants of Venous Oxygen are -
- VO2 Q x Hb x 13 x (SaO2 - SvO2)
- SvO2 SaO2 - (VO2/Q x Hb x 13)
- the most prominent factor in determining SvO2
is VO2/Q - Causes of a Low SvO2 Hypoxemia
- Increased Metabolic Rate
- Low Cardiac Output
- Anemia
39Remember Mixed Venous
- In Critically-Ill Patients, augmenting the
extraction ratio - (in response to a change in oxygen delivery)
- may not be possible !
- In these patients, the Venous Oxygen Levels may
change - little in response to changes in Cardiac Output !
- thus, the Relationship
- between CO (Q) and Mixed Venous Oxygen must be
- determined before using SvO2 or PvO2 to monitor
- changes in DO2 or VO2
40Oximetry
- Arterial Oxygen Saturation can be estimated but
- Venous Oxygen Saturation
- MUST be Measured !
- Due to the shape of the Oxyhemoglobin Curve
- The arterial Sat falls on the flat portion can
be safely estimated - The venous Sat (68 - 77 ) falls on the Steep
Portion and can vary significantly even with
small errors in estimation !
41OxyHb Curve (1)
- Rule-of-Dennis-Betting
- 50 SatPO2 25
- Mixed Ven. Sat 75PO2 40
42OxyHb Curve (2)
- Right-shift off-loading
-
- Acidosis
- Elevated temperature
- Elevated CO2
- Increased 2,3-DPG
43Carbon Dioxide (1)
- An increase in PCO2 of 5 mmHg can result in a
- twofold increase in minute ventilation
- to produce the same increment in ventilation,
- the PaO2 must drop to 55 mmHg
- The ventilatory control system keeps a close eye
on - CO2 but pays little attention to PaO2while
clinicians keep a close eye on PaO2 - and pay little attention to PCO2
I just dont understand.
44Carbon Dioxide (2)
- The CO2 Sink
- Ready source of ions (H HCO3-)
- Buffering capacity of Hb
- (6x that of all the plasma
- proteins combined)
45CO2 Extraction
46The Respiratory Quotient
- RQ VCO2 / VO2
- VCO2 normally 10 mEq/min (14,400 mEq/24 hrs)
- Exercise lung excretion can reach 40,000 mEq/24
hrs. - The kidneys normally excrete 40 80 mEq acid /24
hrs
47Tissue O2-Balance
- Oxygen supply to the tissues is the rate of O2
uptake from the microcirculation - VO2 ER
- The metabolic requirement for oxygen is the rate
at which oxygen is metabolized to water within
the mitochondria - MRO2
- Because oxygen is NOT stored in the tissues, VO2
must match MRO2 if aerobic metabolism is to
continue - when matching occurs, glucose is completely
oxidized to - yield 36 moles of ATP
48Oxygen Balance
- when matching occurs, glucose is completely
- oxidized to yield 36 moles of ATP
- When matching is not equal (VO2 is less than
MRO2), a portion of the glucose is diverted to
the production of lactate in an attempt to
salvage energy - Per mole of glucose converted through anaerobic
metabolism, 2 moles of ATP are gained (47 kcal)
49Dysoxia
- the condition in which the production of ATP
- is limited by the supply of oxygen
- when cell dysoxia leads to a measurable
- change in organ function.SHOCK
50VO2 MRO2
51VO2 Deficit
- In ICU patients, a VO2 that falls below the
normal range (i.e. below 100 ml/min), can be used
as evidence of impaired tissue oxygenation - Studies have shown a direct relationship between
the magnitude of the VO2 deficit and the risk of
multiorgan failure - Dunham et al. CCM 199119231-243
- Shoemaker et al. Chest 1992102208-215
52Oxygen Debt
The cumulative VO2 deficit is referred to as the
oxygen debt In ICU patients, there may be a
progressive and linear relationship between VO2
DO2
53Monitoring of O2 Transport
- The transport variables provide
- no information
- about the ADEQUACY of
- tissue (cellular) oxygenation
- because that requires a measurement of
- metabolic rate.
54Interpreting the Transport Variables
- Low VO2
- Indicates a tissue oxygen deficit
- Oxygen Debt
- The total VO2 deficit over time
- Remember the direct relationship exists between
magnitude of the oxygen debt and subsequent risk
of multiorgan failure - Normal VO2
- Requires a blood lactate level to determine the
adequacy of global tissue oxygenation
55Correcting a VO2 Deficit (1)
- Step 1 CVP or PWP
- If low, infuse volume to normalize filling
pressure - If normal or high, go to step 2
- Step 2 CO
- If low filling pressures not optimalinfuse
volume - If low filling pressures high, start DOBUTAMINE
titrate keep CI gt 3 L/min/m2 (some believe 5) - If blood pressure is also low, start DOPAMINE or
LEVOPHED - If CI gt 3, proceed to Step 3.
56Correcting a VO2 Deficit (2)
- Step 3 VO2 (Oxygen Uptake)
- If VO2 is less than 100 ml/min/m2, use VOLUME
- to goal of CVP 8 12 PWP 18 20
- inotropic therapy to achieve a CI gt 4.5 L/min/m2
- Correct Hb if less than 8 g/dl (some say 10 g/dl)
- If VO2 is greater than 100 ml/min/m2, proceed to
Step 4. - Step 4 Blood Lactate
- Lactate gt 4 with other signs of shock (i.e. organ
failure, low BP), decrease METABOLIC RATE via
sedation or paralysis (? Pentobarbital coma) - Lactate 2 4...controversial !
- Lactate lt 2observe
57VO2 DO2 vs. Time
58Role of Serum Lactate (1)
- An elevated lactate indicates that VO2 is less
than the metabolic rate - The approach must then be to either decrease the
metabolic rate or increase the VO2 - achieving a supranormal level of VO2 may be
difficult - and carries risks
59Serum Lactate (2)
Aduen, et al. JAMA 19942721678-1685
60Serum Lactate Cardiac Index
61 Serum Lactate Cardiac Index
62Optimizing Oxygen Transport The Steps
Filling Pressures Cardiac Output VO2 Serum
Lactate
63Oxygen Transport Variables
- Parameter Normal Range
- Delivery (DO2) 500 - 800 ml/min
- Uptake (VO2) 110 - 160 ml/min
- Extraction Ratio (ER) 22 - 32
- Mixed Venous PO2 33 - 53 mmHg
- Mixed Venous SO2 68 - 77
- DO2 VO2 can be indexed to body surface area
64Oxygen Transport
- it would be a most
- difficult task
- to
- explain
- Any Questions Yet ?
65Oxygen Transport Case 1 (1)
32 yr old male 6 hrs s/p GSW to the
Abdomen Hypotensive nearly coded on the
table Liver shattered packed Multiple holes
in the Small Bowel, Stomach, and Right
Chest Packed and whip-stitched closed the
fascia Now hypotensive and dropping her sats
what do you want to do ?
66Oxygen Transport Case 1 (2)
Remember the Steps Filling Pressures Cardi
ac Output VO2 Serum Lactate
67Questions? The Oxygen Transport Variables
- Oxygen Content CaO2
- Oxygen Delivery DO2
- Oxygen Uptake VO2
- Extraction Ratio ER