1 / 30

Gas Exchange through the Respiratory Membrane

Gas Exchange through the Respiratory Membrane. Physics of gas diffusion. Molecular basis of gas diffusion Net diffusion of a gas in one direction: effect of a concentration gradient. Partial gas pressure. Gas pressures in a mixture of gases (Partial pressures of individual gases:

Download Presentation

Gas Exchange through the Respiratory Membrane

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Gas Exchange through the Respiratory Membrane

  2. Physics of gas diffusion • Molecular basis of gas diffusion • Net diffusion of a gas in one direction: effect of a concentration gradient

  3. Partial gas pressure • Gas pressures in a mixture of gases (Partial pressures of individual gases: • Respiratory physiology and O2, nitrogen and CO2 • Air composition: 79 % nitrogen and 21 % O2 • Total pressure of air at the sea level: 760 mmHg • Nitrogen: 600 mmHg and Oxygen: 160 mmHg • So partial pressure of O2 (Po2) is about 160 mmHg • Pressures of gases dissolved in water and tissues

  4. Factors that determine partial pressure • The partial pressure of a gas is determined not only by its concentration but also by solubility coefficient of the gas • Henry’s law: • Partial p. = Conc.of dissolved gas/ Solubility coefficient • Net diffusion is determined by the difference between two partial pressures

  5. Vapor Pressure of Water • When nonhumidified air is breathed into the respiratory passageways, water immediately evaporates from the surfaces of these passages.. • Water molecules escape from the water surface into the gas phase • Partial pressure that water molecules exert is called vapor pressure of the water • It is 47 mmHg at normal body temperature • PH2O is 47 mmHg • Importance of temperature

  6. Quantifying the net rate of diffusion in fluids • In addition to pressure difference, several other factors affect the rate of gas diffusion in fluid • 1) Solubility of the gas in fluid • 2) Cross-sectional area of the fluid • 3) The distance through which gas must diffuse • 4) Molecular weight of the gas • 5) Temperature of the fluid • Respiratory gases are highly lipid soluble • So, major limitation to the movement of gases in tissues is the rate at which the gases can diffuse through the tissue water

  7. Composition of Alveolar Air vs Atmospheric Air • Alveolar air is only partially replaced by atmospheric air with each breath • Oxygen is constantly being absorbed into the pulmonary blood from the alveolar air • CO2 is constantly diffusing from the pulmonary blood into the alveoli • Dry atmospheric air is humidified before it reaches alveoli

  8. Composition of Alveolar Air vs Atmospheric Air

  9. Rate at which Alveolar Air is Renewed by Atmospheric Air • Functional residual capacity of the lungs (2300 ml) • Tidal volume and 350 ml of new air into the alveoli • Importance of slow replacement of alveolar air: prevention of sudden changes in tissue oxygenation, pH, CO2 level when respiration is temporarily interrupted

  10. O2 Concentration and Partial Pressure in the Alveoli • The more oxygen is absorbed, the lower its concentration in the alveoli becomes or vice versa • 1) rate of absorption of O2 into the blood • 2) rate of entry of new O2 into the lungs by ventilation

  11. O2 Concentration and Partial Pressure in the Alveoli • At normal ventilatory rate, O2 consumption is 250 ml/min • Moderate exercise and absorption of more O2 and maintenance of alveolar PO2 at normal rate of 104 mmHg • Alveolar ventilation can never increase the alveolar PO2 above 149 mmHg as long as breathing atmosph. air

  12. CO2 Concentration and Partial Pressure in Alveoli • CO2 is continually being formed in the tissues and carried to the alveoli by blood • Normal rate of CO2 excretion: 200 ml/min • Normal alveolar PCO2 is 40 mmHg

  13. Expired Air • Expired air is a combination of dead space air and alveolar air; its composition is determined by • Amount of expired air that is in dead space air • The amount that is alveolar air • Method of collecting alveolar air (last portion of expired air)

  14. Partial Pressure Gradients

  15. Respiratory Membrane • Respiratory unit: • Respiratory bronchiole, alveolar ducts, atria and alveoli • There are about 300 million alveoli in the two lungs • Alveoli are very thin (0.2 mm in diameter) and close to each other • All these membranes are called respiratory or pulmonary membrane

  16. Different layers of the respiratory membrane

  17. Respiratory Membrane

  18. Surface Area and Thickness of the Respiratory Membrane • Respiratory membranes: • Are only 0.5 to 1 m thick, allowing for efficient gas exchange • Have a total surface area (in males) of about 60 m2 (40 times that of one’s skin) • Thicken if lungs become waterlogged and edematous, whereby gas exchange is inadequate and oxygen deprivation results • Decrease in surface area with emphysema, when walls of adjacent alveoli break through

  19. Different layers of the respiratory membrane • Despite the number of layers, the thickness of respiratory membrane in some areas is 0.2 mm (average is 0.6 mm) • Total surface area of the respiratory membrane • Size of pulmonary capillaries (5 mm) and erythrocytes

  20. Factors that affect the rate of gas diffusion through the respiratory membrane • The factors that determine how rapidly a gas will pass through the membrane: • 1) Thickness of the membrane • Edema, fibrosis… • 2) Surface area of the membrane • Emphysema • 3) Diffusion co-efficient of the gas in the membrane • 4) Partial pressure difference of the gas between the two sides of the membrane

  21. Diffusion capacity of the respiratory membrane • The ability of the respiratory membrane to exchange a gas between the alveoli and pulmonary blood is expressed in quantitative terms (diffusing capacity) • Diffusing capacity for O2 at rest is 21 ml/min/mmHg • Mean O2 difference is 11 mmHg • So 11 x 21 = 230 ml O2 per min • Change in O2 diffusing capacity during exercise • Opennin up of many previously dormant pulmonary capillaries • A better match between ventilation and perfusion areas

  22. Diffusion capacity of the respiratory membrane

  23. Oxygenation of Blood

  24. Effect of Ventilation Perfusion Ratio on Alveolar Gas Concentration • Two factors determine the PO2 and PCO2 in the alveoli • Rate of alveolar ventilation • Rate of transfer of O2 and CO2 through respiratory membrane • Ventilation-perfusion ratio (VA/Q) some areas are ventilated but have no blood flow, other areas may have excellent blood flow but little or no ventilation • Alveolar O2 and CO2 partial pressure when VA/Q = 0 • There is no ventilation, and alveolar air comes to an equlibrium with blood O2 and CO2 • Venous blood has PO2 of 40 mmHg and PCO2 of 45 mmHg • These will be the normal partial pressures in the alveoli when VA/Q=0

  25. Effect of Ventilation Perfusion Ratio on Alveolar Gas Concentration • Alveolar O2 and CO2 partial pressure when VA/Q = ∞ • There is no capillary blood flow • Instead of alveolar air coming to an equlibrium with the venous blood, it becomes equal to the humidified inspired air (PO2 = 149 mmHg) • Alveolar O2 and CO2 partial pressure when VA/Q is normal • PO2 in the alveolar air is normally 104 mmHg • PCO2 in the alveolar air is normally 40 mmHg

  26. PO2 – PCO2, VA / Q Diagram

  27. Concept of Physiologic Shunt • In this case, VA/Q ratio is below normal • Shunted blood • Blood fraction that flows through unventilated areas • The bronchial blood that is about 2% of cardiac output is also unoxygenated blood • Total quantitative amount of shunted blood per min is called physiologic shunt • The greater the physiologic shunt, the greater the amount of blood that fails to be oxygenated as it passes through the lungs

  28. Concept of Physiologic Dead Space • In this case, VA/Q ratio is greater than normal • Ventilation is normal but capillary blood flow is low • There is far more O2 in the alveoli than can be transported away from the alveoli by the flowing blood • Thus, ventilation of these alveoli is “wasted” • Physiologic dead space can be calculated by using Bohr equation:

  29. Abnormalities of Ventilation – Perfusion Ratio • Abnormal VA/Q in the uppper and lower normal lung • VA/Q is as much as 2.5 times as great as the ideal value • At the bottom of the lung, there is slightly too little ventilation in relation to blood flow with VA/Q as low as 0.6 times the ideal value • Abnormal VA/Q in chronic obstructive lung disease: • In COPD, some areas of the lung exhibit serious physiologic shunt and other areas exhibit serious physiologic dead space • Emphysema and smoking

More Related