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Therapeutic Gases Oxygen

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Title: Therapeutic Gases Oxygen


1
Therapeutic Gases - Oxygen
  • Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D.
  • rlcopeland_at_fac.howard.edu

2
Oxygen
Oxygen, water, and food are of fundamental
importance to the animal organism. Of these three
basic essentials for the maintenance of life, the
deprivation of oxygen leads to death most
rapidly. Therapy with oxygen is useful or
necessary for life in several diseases and
intoxications that interfere with normal
oxygenation of the blood or tissues.
3
Normal Oxygenation
  • Oxygen moves down a stepwise series of partial
    pressure gradients from the inspired air to the
    body's cells and their mitochondria. Air normally
    contains 20.9 oxygen, equivalent (at normal
    barometric pressure) to a partial pressure of 159
    mm Hg

4
Normal Oxygenation
  • Blood Oxygen Content
  • Oxygen in blood is carried primarily in chemical
    combination with hemoglobin and to a small extent
    in physical solution in plasma.
  • When fully saturated, each gram of hemoglobin
    binds about 1.3 ml of oxygen.
  • Hemoglobin is about 98 saturated when air is
    breathed under normal circumstances

5
Oxygen Deprivation
  • Hypoxia is the term used to denote insufficient
    oxygenation of the tissues.

6
Causes of Hypoxia
  • Prepulmonary Hypoxia. Hypoxia can be caused by
    inadequate delivery of oxygen to the lung.
  • results from inadequate ventilation brought about
    by airway obstruction (laryngospasm,
    bronchospasm), muscular weakness (disease or
    neuromuscular-blocking drugs), or impaired
    respiratory drive central nervous system (CNS)
    disease, opioids, anesthetics.

7
Causes of Hypoxia
  • Pulmonary Hypoxia - abnormal pulmonary function
    can impair oxygenation of the blood.
  • mismatch between ventilation and perfusion-
    (e.g., adult respiratory distress syndrome,
    asthma, emphysema).
  • thickened barrier to diffusion and intrapulmonary
    shunting of venous blood (fibrosis, pulmonary
    edema).

8
Causes of Hypoxia
  • Postpulmonary Hypoxia
  • inadequate delivery of oxygen to tissues may be
    the result of low cardiac output (shock),
    maldistribution of cardiac output (sepsis,
    vascular occlusion)
  • an inadequate concentration of oxygen in arterial
    blood (anemia, hemoglobinopathies, carbon
    monoxide poisoning).

9
  • the tissues may be unable to extract or utilize
    sufficient oxygen. This may result from an
    unusually high metabolic demand (thyrotoxicosis,
    hyperpyrexia) or to malfunction of cellular
    enzyme systems (cyanide poisoning).

10
Effects of Hypoxia
  • Respiration
  • Cardiovascular System
  • Central Nervous System
  • Cellular and Metabolic Effects

11
Respiration
  • Ventilatory rate and depth progressively increase
    during hypoxia as a result of stimulation of
    carotid and aortic chemoreceptors minute
    ventilation almost doubles when normal
    individuals inspire gas with a PO2 of 50 mm Hg

12
Cardiovascular System
  • Cardiac output increases with hypoxia as a result
    of increased heart rate and decreased peripheral
    vascular resistance.
  • Severe hypoxia, however, can produce bradycardia
    and, ultimately, circulatory failure.

13
CNS
  • The CNS is least able to tolerate hypoxia.
    Hypoxia is accompanied initially by decreased
    intellectual capacity and impaired judgment and
    psychomotor ability this state progresses to
    confusion and restlessness and ultimately to
    stupor, coma, and death as the PaO2 decreases
    below 30 to 40 mm Hg.

14
Cellular and Metabolic Effects
  • Delivery of oxygen to mitochondria slows as the
    partial pressure gradient from capillaries to
    tissues decreases.
  • At a mitochondrial PO2 of less than about 1 mm Hg
    (130 Pa), aerobic metabolism stops, and the less
    efficient anaerobic pathways of glycolysis become
    responsible for the production of cellular
    energy.
  • The cellular concentrations of Na, Ca2, and H
    increase, leading to cell death.

15
Adaptation to Hypoxia
  • Long-term hypoxia results in adaptive
    physiological changes
  • increased numbers of pulmonary alveoli,
    increased concentrations of hemoglobin in blood
    and myoglobin in muscle, and a decreased
    ventilatory response to hypoxia
  • Short-term exposure to altitude produces similar
    adaptive changes

16
  • Acute exposure - "mountain sickness
  • a syndrome characterized initially by headache,
    nausea, dyspnea, and impaired judgment,
    progressing to pulmonary and cerebral edema
  • Mountain sickness is treated by inhalation of
    oxygen, descent to lower altitude, or by an
    increase in ambient pressure. Treatment with
    diuretics (carbonic anhydrase inhibitors) and
    steroids also may be helpful.

17
Effects of Oxygen Inhalation
  • The primary use for inhalation of oxygen is to
    reverse the effects of hypoxia other
    consequences usually are minor. However, when
    oxygen is breathed in excessive amounts, toxic
    effects can occur

18
Respiration
  • Inhalation of oxygen at 1 atmosphere or above
    causes a small degree of respiratory depression
    in normal subjects, presumably as a result of
    loss of tonic chemoreceptor activity.
  • Within a few minutes, ventilation increases
    because of a paradoxical increase in the tension
    of carbon dioxide in tissues.

19
  • Carbon dioxide is carried by blood in the form of
    bicarbonate. This mechanism of carbon dioxide
    transfer operates more readily when a hydrogen
    ion acceptor, such as deoxyhemoglobin (a stronger
    base than oxyhemoglobin), is available.
  • Oxygen at a high PO2, (e.g., during hyperbaric
    oxygenation), the amount of physically dissolved
    oxygen may be sufficient to satisfy the
    requirements of tissue.
  • little or no oxygen is extracted from
    oxyhemoglobin, and deoxyhemoglobin is not formed.
  • Carbon dioxide is then buffered less efficiently,
    and the PCO2 of the tissues rises by several mm
    Hg.

20
Oxygen Toxicity
  • Oxygen toxicity probably results from an
    increased production of reactive species such as
    superoxide anion, singlet oxygen, hydroxyl
    radical, and hydrogen peroxide. The oxidative
    damage initiated by these substances is
    propagated by lipid peroxidation and ultimately
    involves all components of the cell. Cell injury
    and death are presumed to result from loss of
    membrane integrity.

21
  • Central Nervous System. CNS oxygen toxicity does
    not occur when the partial pressure of inspired
    oxygen is less than 2 atmospheres its occurrence
    is thus limited to a small number of hyperbaric
    applications. CNS toxicity is observed before
    pulmonary toxicity when oxygen is administered at
    partial pressures above 2.5 atmospheres
  • characterized by convulsions, which may be
    preceded by visual symptoms or muscular twitching

22
Therapeutic Uses
  • Correction of Hypoxia
  • Reduction of the Partial Pressure of an Inert Gas
  • Oxygen as a Diluent
  • Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy
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