Pulmonary gas pressures

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Pathophysiology sample values
BMP/ELECTROLYTES:
Na+ = 140 Cl = 100 BUN = 20 /
Glu = 150
\
K+ = 4 CO2 = 22 PCr = 1.0
ARTERIAL BLOOD GAS:
HCO3 = 24 p a CO2 = 40 p a O2 = 95 pH = 7.40
ALVEOLAR GAS:
p A CO2 = 36 p A O2 = 105 A-a g = 10
OTHER:
Ca = 9.5 Mg2+ = 2.0 PO4 = 1
CK = 55 BE = −0.36 AG = 16
SERUM OSMOLARITY/RENAL:
PMO = 300 PCO = 295 POG = 5 BUN:Cr = 20
URINALYSIS:
UNa+ = 80 UCl = 100 UAG = 5 FENa = 0.95
UK+ = 25 USG = 1.01 UCr = 60 UO = 800
PROTEIN/GI/LIVER FUNCTION TESTS:
LDH = 100 TP = 7.6 AST = 25 TBIL = 0.7
ALP = 71 Alb = 4.0 ALT = 40 BC = 0.5
AST/ALT = 0.6 BU = 0.2
AF alb = 3.0 SAAG = 1.0 SOG = 60
CSF:
CSF alb = 30 CSF glu = 60 CSF/S alb = 7.5 CSF/S glu = 0.6

The factors that determine the values for alveolar pO2 and pCO2 are:

Contents

Partial pressures

The partial pressures (in torr) for a human at rest:

Partial pressure of oxygen (at sea level)

Location pO2
(torr or mmHg)
Ambient air159
Alveoli104

(PAO2)

Arterial blood95-100 (PaO2)
Venous blood40-50
Non-lung Capillaries20-40

The alveolar oxygen partial pressure is lower than the atmospheric O2 partial pressure for two reasons.

The alveolar pO2 is not routinely measured but is calculated from blood gas measurements by the alveolar gas equation.

Partial pressure of carbon dioxide

Location pCO2
(torr or mmHg)
Outside air - dry air at sea level0.3
Alveolar air35
Arteriole blood40
Venous blood50
Cells50

Pathology

The partial pressure of carbon dioxide, along with the pH, can be used to differentiate between metabolic acidosis, metabolic alkalosis, respiratory acidosis, and respiratory alkalosis.

Hypoventilation exists when the ratio of carbon dioxide production to alveolar ventilation increases above normal values – greater than 45mmHg. If pH is also less than 7.35 this is respiratory acidosis.

Hyperventilation exists when the same ratio decreases – less than 35mmHg. If the pH is also greater than 7.45 this is respiratory alkalosis. [1] [2]

See also

References

  1. Dugdale DC, Zieve D. Gasometría arterial. Medline Plus. 09/01/2012.
  2. Leticia Godoy Dias Sanderson. Gasometria arterial - Artigo de revisão. Fevereiro 2012. Archived 2014-10-17 at the Wayback Machine