Title: Pulmonary Gas Exchange and Gas Transport
1Pulmonary Gas Exchange and Gas Transport
- Dr. Meg-angela Christi Amores
2Physiologic Anatomy
- One of the most important problems in all the
respiratory passages is to keep them open to
allow easy passage of air to and from the alveoli - Trachea with cartilage rings 5/6 of the way
around - Bronchi walls have less extensive cartilage
plates - Bronchioles no plates. Diameter lt1.5mm, all
smooth muscles - Kept expanded by same transpulmonary pressures
that expand the alveoli
3(No Transcript)
4Physiologic Anatomy
- All areas of the trachea and bronchi not occupied
by cartilage plates, walls are composed of smooth
muscles - Resistance to flow is greatest NOT in the minute
air passages of terminal bronchioles but in some
of the larger bronchi near to the trachea. - Smaller airways are easily occluded
- smooth muscles contract easily
5Pulmonary Circulatory System
- Pulmonary Vessels
- Pulmonary artery (5 cm, thin, 2x VC, 1/3 aorta)
- Right and Left main pulmonary branches lungs
- Large compliance (7 mL/mmHg)
- Allows pulmonary arteries to accommodate 2/3 of
stroke volume output of Right Ventricle - Bronchial Vessels arterial supply to the lungs
- 1/3 of cardiac output
- Supplies supporting tissues (CT, septa, bronchi)
- Drains to pulmonary veins
6Pulmonary vs. Alveolar Ventilation
- Pulmonary Ventilation
- Inflow and outflow of air
between the atmosphere
and the lung alveoli - Alveolar Ventilation
- Rate at which new air reaches the areas in the
lung where it is in proximity to the pulmonary
blood or gas exchange areas (alveolar sacs,
ducts, respiratory bronchioles)
7Diffusion of Gases
- Diffusion
- Random molecular motion of molecules with energy
provided by kinetic motion of the molecules - All molecules are continually undergoing motion
except in absolute zero temperature - Net diffusion
- Product of diffusion from high to low
concentration
8Gas Pressures
- Partial Pressure
- Pressure is directly proportional to the
concentration of gas molecules caused by impact
of moving molecules against a surface - In respiration, theres mixture of gases O2, N2,
CO2 - Rate of diffusion of each gas is directly
proportional to the pressure caused by each gas
alone - AIR total Pressure 760 mmHg
- 79 N, 21 O2 PP N 600mmHg , PP O2
160mmHg
9Gas Pressure in Fluid
- Determined by its concentration and by solubility
coefficient - If gas is repelled, pressure increases
- HENRYs LAW Pressure concentration
- solubility coefficient
10Solubility of Gases in body temp.
- O2 0.024
- CO2 0.57 - 20x more soluble than O2
- CO 0.018
- N2 0.012
- He 0.008
11Factors that affect Rate of Gas Diffusion thru
Respiratory Membrane
- Respiratory Unit
- Respiratory bronchiole
- Alveolar ducts
- Atria
- Alveoli (300 Million in both lungs) (0.2mm)
- their membranes make up the respiratory membrane
12Respiratory Membrane
- Layers
- Layer of fluid lining alveolus
(surfactant) - Alveolar epithelium
- Epithelial basement membrane
- Interstitial Space
- Capillary basement membrane
- Capillary endothelial membrane
- Overall thickness 0.2um (ave 0.6 um)
- Total surface area 70 m2
13Factors that affect Rate of Gas Diffusion thru
Respiratory Membrane
- Thickness of membrane
- Inc. in edema and fibrosis
- Surface area of membrane
- Dec. in removal of lung and emphysema
- Diffusion coefficient of Gas in substance of
membrane - Gas solubility
- Pressure difference
- Difference between partial pressure of gas in
alveoli and pressure of gas in pulmonary
capillary blood
14Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio
- A concept developed to help us understand
respiratory exchange where there is imbalance
between alveolar ventilation and alveolar blood
flow - Areas in lung with well ventilation but no
bloodflow or excellent blood flow but no
ventilation - Va alveolar ventilation
- Q blood flow
15Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio
- Va/Q normal
- If Va is 0 (zero), but with perfusion Va/Q 0
- If Va is present, but no perfusion Va/Q
infinity - In both there is no gas exchange
16Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio
- Normal person
- Upright Va and Q are less in Upper part but Q is
more - At top of lung Va/Q 2.5x gt as ideal
physiologic dead space (ventilation but less
blood flow) - At bottom Va is less than Q
- Va/Q is 0.6 lt as ideal physiologic shunt
- COPD patient
- Smoker, emphysema, alveolar walls destroyed
- Wasted blood flow severe shunting
17Transport of O2 and CO2
- Pressure differences causes gas to diffuse
Alveolus Capillaries Tissues (fluid) Tissues (cells)
pO2 104 mmHg 95 mmHg 40 mmHg 5-40 (ave 23) mmHg
pCO2 40 mmHg 45 mmHg 45 mmHg 46 mmHg
18Transport of O2 and CO2
- CO2 can diffuse about 20 times as rapidly as O2
- Transport of O2 in blood
- 97 of O2 from lungs to tissues are carried in
combination with hemoglobin - O2 combines loosely and reversibly with heme
- pO2 O2 combines with heme (pulm capi)
- pO2 O2 is released (tissue capillaries)
19- For the next meeting, read on Regulation of
Respiration - Guyton Textbook of Medical Physiology, 10th
edition Chapter 41