Gas Exchange and its Effect on Blood Gas Concentrations in the Amphibian, Xenopus Laevis

1974 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 567-579
Author(s):  
M. G. EMILIO ◽  
G. SHELTON

1. Unrestrained Xenopus with access to air had an oxygen consumption, as measured at 20 °C by manometric and electrode techniques, of approximately 4.5 ml O2 100 g-1 h-1 of which 1.1 ml was taken in through the skin. 2. Measurements of body volume showed that the rate of oxygen uptake from the lungs was high when the animal was at the surface but fell rapidly during the first few minutes of a dive. 3. Oxygen tensions in systemic (80 mmHg) and pulmocutaneous (60 mmHg) vessels provided evidence for separation of blood flows in the ventricle of the animal when breathing air. The tensions fell in all parts of the circulation throughout a dive. 4. The above data, together with a conventionally determined oxygen dissociation curve, show that both blood and lungs are used to a limited extent as oxygen stores during a dive, the blood being more important. The stores do not permit tissue consumption to go on at a uniform rate throughout a normal breathing-diving cycle.

Breathe ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 194-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie-Ann Collins ◽  
Aram Rudenski ◽  
John Gibson ◽  
Luke Howard ◽  
Ronan O’Driscoll

Key PointsIn clinical practice, the level of arterial oxygenation can be measured either directly by blood gas sampling to measure partial pressure (PaO2) and percentage saturation (SaO2) or indirectly by pulse oximetry (SpO2).This review addresses the strengths and weaknesses of each of these tests and gives advice on their clinical use.The haemoglobin–oxygen dissociation curve describing the relationship between oxygen partial pressure and saturation can be modelled mathematically and routinely obtained clinical data support the accuracy of a historical equation used to describe this relationship.Educational AimsTo understand how oxygen is delivered to the tissues.To understand the relationships between oxygen saturation, partial pressure, content and tissue delivery.The clinical relevance of the haemoglobin–oxygen dissociation curve will be reviewed and we will show how a mathematical model of the curve, derived in the 1960s from limited laboratory data, accurately describes the relationship between oxygen saturation and partial pressure in a large number of routinely obtained clinical samples.To understand the role of pulse oximetry in clinical practice.To understand the differences between arterial, capillary and venous blood gas samples and the role of their measurement in clinical practice.The delivery of oxygen by arterial blood to the tissues of the body has a number of critical determinants including blood oxygen concentration (content), saturation (SO2) and partial pressure, haemoglobin concentration and cardiac output, including its distribution. The haemoglobin–oxygen dissociation curve, a graphical representation of the relationship between oxygen satur­ation and oxygen partial pressure helps us to understand some of the principles underpinning this process. Historically this curve was derived from very limited data based on blood samples from small numbers of healthy subjects which were manipulated in vitro and ultimately determined by equations such as those described by Severinghaus in 1979. In a study of 3524 clinical specimens, we found that this equation estimated the SO2 in blood from patients with normal pH and SO2 >70% with remarkable accuracy and, to our knowledge, this is the first large-scale validation of this equation using clinical samples. Oxygen saturation by pulse oximetry (SpO2) is nowadays the standard clinical method for assessing arterial oxygen saturation, providing a convenient, pain-free means of continuously assessing oxygenation, provided the interpreting clinician is aware of important limitations. The use of pulse oximetry reduces the need for arterial blood gas analysis (SaO2) as many patients who are not at risk of hypercapnic respiratory failure or metabolic acidosis and have acceptable SpO2 do not necessarily require blood gas analysis. While arterial sampling remains the gold-standard method of assessing ventilation and oxygenation, in those patients in whom blood gas analysis is indicated, arterialised capillary samples also have a valuable role in patient care. The clinical role of venous blood gases however remains less well defined.


1971 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 399-408
Author(s):  
G. M. HUGHES ◽  
B. A. HILLS

1. An analysis is given which makes it possible to trace out the changes in oxygen tensions in the blood and water during their passage along a secondary lamella of the dogfish gill. 2. The analysis depends on a knowledge of the oxygen-dissociation curve of the blood, the shape of the secondary lamella and the oxygen tensions of the two media before and after their passage through the gills. It indicates the differences to be expected according to whether the flows are co-current or counter-current. 3. The method, with modifications, could be applied to the gills of all fishes.


2002 ◽  
Vol 97 (1) ◽  
pp. 253-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
John W. Severinghaus

In 1953, the doctor draft interrupted Dr. Severinghaus' anesthesia and physiology training and sent him to the National Institutes of Health as director of anesthesia research at the newly opened Clinical Center. He developed precise laboratory partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PCO(2)) and pH analysis to investigate lung blood gas exchange during hypothermia. Constants for carbon dioxide solubility and pK' were more accurately determined. In August 1954, he heard Richard Stow describe invention of a carbon dioxide electrode and immediately built one, improved its stability, and tested its response characteristics. In April 1956, he also heard Leland Clark reveal his invention of an oxygen electrode. Dr. Severinghaus obtained one and constructed a stirred cuvette in which blood partial pressure of oxygen (PO(2)) could be accurately measured. Technician Bradley and Dr. Severinghaus combined these, making the first blood gas analysis system in 1957 and 1958, and shortly thereafter, they added a pH electrode. Blood gas analyzers rapidly developed commercially. Dr. Severinghaus collaborated with Astrup and other Danes on the Haldane and Bohr effects and their concepts of base excess during two sabbaticals in Copenhagen. Work with both Astrup and Roughton on the oxygen dissociation curve led Dr. Severinghaus to devise a modified Hill equation that closely fit their new, better human oxygen dissociation curve and a blood gas slide rule that solved oxygen dissociation curve, PCO(2), pH, and acid-base questions. Blood gas analysis revolutionized both clinical medicine and cardiorespiratory and metabolic physiology.


1980 ◽  
Vol 93 (4) ◽  
pp. 424-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Alvarez-Sala ◽  
M. A. Urbán ◽  
J. J. Sicilia ◽  
A. J. Diaz Fdez ◽  
F. Fdez Mendieta ◽  
...  

Abstract. In 21 hyperthyroid female patients studied on 29 occasions, high levels of red-cell 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG) have been found (5.75 ± 0.7 mm) which, compared to a euthyroid control group (4.88 ± 0.4 mm), could not be accounted for by differences in haematocrit, haemoglobin or phosphataemia. A significant correlation was found (P < 0.05) between serum thyroid hormones and the 2,3-DPG concentration in the hyperthyroid patients. Eight of these patients were reexamined after treatment and normalization of thyroid function, showed a regression to normal 2,3-DPG values (4.81 ± 0.6 mm) which could not be attributed to variations in haematocrit, haemoglobin or phosphataemia either. We therefore deduce that the shift to the right in the haemoglobin oxygen dissociation curve observed in patients of this type may be due to an increase in the red-cell 2,3-DPG content.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosella Scrima ◽  
Sabino Fugetto ◽  
Nazzareno Capitanio ◽  
Domenico L. Gatti

AbstractAbnormal hemoglobins can have major consequences for tissue delivery of oxygen. Correct diagnosis of hemoglobinopathies with altered oxygen affinity requires a determination of hemoglobin oxygen dissociation curve (ODC), which relates the hemoglobin oxygen saturation to the partial pressure of oxygen in the blood. Determination of the ODC of human hemoglobin is typically carried out under conditions in which hemoglobin is in equilibrium with O2 at each partial pressure. However, in the human body due to the fast transit of RBCs through tissues hemoglobin oxygen exchanges occur under non-equilibrium conditions. We describe the determination of non-equilibrium ODC, and show that under these conditions Hb cooperativity has two apparent components in the Adair, Perutz, and MWC models of Hb. The first component, which we call sequential cooperativity, accounts for ∼70% of Hb cooperativity, and emerges from the constraint of sequential binding that is shared by the three models. The second component, which we call conformational cooperativity, accounts for ∼30% of Hb cooperativity, and is due either to a conformational equilibrium between low affinity and high affinity tetramers (as in the MWC model), or to a conformational change from low to high affinity once two of the tetramer sites are occupied (Perutz model).


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document