Blood Gas Transport: Implications for O2 and CO2 Exchange in Lungs and Tissues.

Semin Respir Crit Care Med

Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California.

Published: October 2023

The well-known ways in which O and CO (and other gases) are carried in the blood were presented in the preceding chapter. However, what the many available texts about O and CO transport do not emphasize is why knowing how gases are carried in blood matters, and this second, companion, article specifically addresses that critical aspect of gas exchange physiology. During gas exchange, both at the lungs and in the peripheral tissues, it is the shapes and the slopes of the O and CO binding curves that explain almost all of the behaviors of each gas and the quantitative differences observed between them. This conclusion is derived from first principle considerations of the gas exchange processes. Dissociation curve shape and slope differences explain most of the differences between O and CO in both diffusive exchange in the lungs and tissues and convective exchange/transport in, and between, the lungs and tissues. In fact, each of the chapters in this volume describes physiological behavior that depends more or less directly on the dissociation curves of O and CO.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-1771161DOI Listing

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