BIOB34H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Pulmonary Edema, Partial Pressure, Respiratory Tract Infection

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16 Jul 2019
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Distance (or thickness: the blood-gas barrier is a little span of tissue that separates the blood and the gas. It needs to be thin to allow for o2 to diffuse from the heart to the blood: mammals and birds generally have much thinner blood-gas barriers than that of other vertebrates. Birds need this thin blood gas barrier as they can fly. The blood0gas barrier becomes thicker and slows down the rate of diffusion and slows down. O2 getting to where it needs to be. Pressure gradient: a uniform pool is something found in mammalian lungs. We fill the sac with air and let diffusion occur into the blood. Initially the sac is going to have a lot of air (high pressure gradient) and then the blood going into the sac is deoxygenated so the partial pressure of o2 decreases. This means that the pressure gradient is going to be high. Leading to a high diffusion rate of o2.

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