Summary: Case 5: ''live High, Train Low''

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  • 1 Gas exchange in the alveoli

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  • When a breath is taken during inhalation, the concentration of the incoming oxygen is higher in the alveolus than in the erythrocytes, resulting in...

    Oxygen leaving the alveolus and entering the erythrocyte
  • During exhalation, the concentration of CO2 is lower in the alveolus than in the erythrocytes, resulting in...

    CO2 leaving the erythrocyte and entering the alveolus 
  • Reaction of hemoglobin and O2

    Hb + O2 <--> HbO2
    The central iron atom of each heme-group can bind reversibly with an oxygen molecule, iron-oxygen bond is weak that can easily be broken.
    1 hemoglobin molecule can bind 4 O2 molecules.
    In pulmonary capillaries, oxygen from alveoli first dissolves in plasma and then diffuses into red blood cells.
  • Law of mass action

    As the concentration of free O2 increases, more oxygen binds to hemoglobin and the equation shifts to the right, producing more HbO2.
  • 1.1.1 Type I pneumocytes

  • What is the function of the thin walls of the squamous (type I) alveolar cells, also known as type I pneumocytes, which occur in 95% of the alveoli?

    The walls allow rapid gas exchange (CO2 and air)
  • 1.1.2 Type II pneumocytes

  • What are the two functions of the type II pneumocytes that occur at 5% of the alveoli?

    1. Secretion of pulmonary surfactant
    2. Repair alveolar epithelium when squamous is damaged
  • 1.1.2.1 Pulmonary surfactant

  • Surfactant is composed of phospolipids and proteins, what is it function?

    It coats the alveoli, preventing pressure build-up during exparation
  • What would happen if surfactant was not present on alveoli?

    The walls of deflating alveoli would cling together, making it hard to re-inflate them
  • 2 Dissociation curve

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  • What does the oxygen dissociation curve (pO2) plot?

    %saturation against the partial pressure of oxygen
  • Which 4 factors affect the % saturation of Hb, and so, the dissociation curve affected by?

    • pCO2
    • pH
    • Temperature
    • 2,3-DPG
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