Transport Of Carbon Dioxide In The Blood
Question 1. Describe the carbon dioxide transport in blood. Add a note on haldane’s effect.
Answer:
Carbon dioxide transport in blood:
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- As dissolved form – 7%
- Carbon dioxide diffuses into blood and dissolves in the fluid of plasma forming a simple solution and is transported
- As carbonic acid – negligible
- Carbon dioxide enters the plasma and combined with water to form carbonic acid
- As carbamino compounds – 30%
- In plasma
- Carbon dioxide combines with plasma proteins and forms carbamino proteins
- It is loose bond so can be easily released
- It is reversible reaction
- In RBCs
- Carbon dioxide combines with haemoglobin and forms carbhaemoglobin
- It is also reversible process
- In plasma
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- As bicarbonate – 63%
- From plasma carbon dioxide enters the blood
- Here it combines with water present in RBC and forms carbonic acid in the presence of carbonic anhydrase enzyme
- Carbonic acid is unstable compound so it is readily dissociated into bicarbonate and hydrogen ions By this concentration of bicarbonate ion increases in RBCs
- This leads to diffusion of bicarbonate from cell into plasma
- Thus carbon dioxide is transported in this form.
Haldane Effect:
- It is the effect by which combination of oxygen with hemoglobin displaces carbon dioxide from hemoglobin
- The excess of oxygen content in blood causes shift of the carbon dioxide dissociation curve to the right
Haldane Effect Significance:
- Essential for release of carbon dioxide from blood into the alveoli of lungs and uptake of oxygen by the blood
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Question 2. Define timed vital capacity. Give its normal value. Mention a condition in which it is decreased.
Answer:
Timed vital capacity:
It is the volume of air that can be expired out forcefully in a given unit of time.
Normal values:
- TVC1-83% of total vital capacity
- TVC2-94% of total vital capacity
- TVC3-97% of total vital capacity
- After third second – 100% of total vital capacity
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Decreased in:
- Asthma
- Emphysema
- Fibrosis
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