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VENTILATION AND ITS MEASUREMENT ►
Gases (air) are
measured by virtue of the pressures that they exert. When gases are mixed they each contribute
to a total pressure. Each gas contributes a partial pressure. Total
atmospheric air pressure at sea level, at 15◦ C and zero humidity, is
760 mmHg (mm of mercury). At sea level
partial pressure oxygen, written PO2 is 159 mmHg (20.93),
and partial pressure carbon dioxide,
written PCO2, is 0.3
mmHg (less than 0.04%). Most of the gas exchange, O2 and CO2,
takes place in the alveolar-capillary
unit. Normal inhalation, at sea
level, increases alveolar PO2
(average PO2 in the alveoli) to about 104 mmHg. Because the venous blood arriving in the pulmonary capillary network contains
only about 40 mmHg PO2, rapid diffusion
from the alveoli takes place, resulting in an arterial PO2 (PaO2)
of about 100 mmHg, most of which (98.5%) is transported to the tissues by haemoglobin in the red blood
cells. Without pure oxygen (where PO2
= 760 mmHg) or hyperbaric chamber pressure (where PO2 = 600 mmHg),
the O2 dissolved in blood plasma by itself is not adequate to
support life. Carbon dioxide is transported to the lungs where it is (1) excreted into the alveoli of the lungs
for discharge into the atmosphere, and (2)
reallocated to the body for proper maintenance of acid-base
physiology. Reallocation of CO2
means reflexive coordination of breathing depth and rate, where arterial PCO2 (PaCO2), which under normal
circumstances, is maintained at about 40 mmHg for normalising blood plasma pH
(about 7.4). PCO2 in
capillary venous blood, at rest, is about 46 to 48 mmHg, whereas inspired
atmospheric air contains only about 0.3 mmHg PCO2. Because pulmonary capillary PCO2
equilibrates with alveolar PCO2
as a result of diffusion, alveolar PCO2 levels must also be
continuously maintained at about 40 mmHg.
Thus, if alveolar PCO2 increases, so too does arterial PCO2,
and if alveolar PCO2 drops as a result of overbreathing, so too
does arterial CO2. Bad breathing is when learned breathing behaviour disturbs the
proper regulation of CO2 allocation. Hypocapnia (CO2 deficit), as a consequence of
overbreathing behaviour, is measured with a capnograph (or capnometer),
an instrument used to measure average alveolar PCO2. In a lung-healthy and
cardiovascular-healthy person the alveolar PCO2 is equivalent to
PaCO2. Generally, PaCO2
levels below 35 mmHg constitute hypocapnia
(CO2 deficit): 30-35 mmHg
is mild to moderate, 25-30 mmHg is serious, and 20-25 mmHg is severe
hypocapnia. These instruments are used
worldwide in emergency medicine, in critical care, and during surgery for gas
monitoring and regulation purposes; these are medical applications. The CapnoTrainer
provides for educational applications. The CapnoTrainer is a capnometer specifically designed and
manufactured for evaluating, observing, and self-regulating overbreathing
behaviour. Click here to learn more about external respiration. Copyrighted by Behavioral
Physiology Institute,
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