Oxygen transport
Respiration

Author: Gianpiero Pescarmona
Date: 30/03/2007

Description

Earth's Atmosphere

pO2 gradient from air to tissues

Oxygen transport

The oxygen

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Hb

males : 13-16 g%ml
females : 12-15 g%ml

Why is the partial oxygen pressure of human tissues a crucial parameter? Small molecules and hypoxia, 2011

  • Oxygen supply and diffusion into tissues are necessary for survival. The oxygen partial pressure (pO2), which is a key component of the physiological state of an organ, results from the balance between oxygen delivery and its consumption. In mammals, oxygen is transported by red blood cells circulating in a well-organized vasculature. Oxygen delivery is dependent on the metabolic requirements and functional status of each organ. Consequently, in a physiological condition, organ and tissue are characterized by their own unique ‘tissue normoxia’ or ‘physioxia’ status. Tissue oxygenation is severely disturbed during pathological conditions such as cancer, diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, etc., which are associated with decrease in pO2, i.e. ‘hypoxia’. In this review, we present an array of methods currently used for assessing tissue oxygenation. We show that hypoxia is marked during tumour development and has strong consequences for oxygenation and its influence upon chemotherapy efficiency. Then we compare this to physiological pO2 values of human organs. Finally we evaluate consequences of physioxia on cell activity and its molecular modulations. More importantly we emphasize the discrepancy between in vivo and in vitro tissue and cells oxygen status which can have detrimental effects on experimental outcome. It appears that the values corresponding to the physioxia are ranging between 11% and 1% O2 whereas current in vitro experimentations are usually performed in 19.95% O2, an artificial context as far as oxygen balance is concerned. It is important to realize that most of the experiments performed in so-called normoxia might be dangerously misleading.
Attachments
fileuserdate
Types_of_Hb.docalice22/02/2010
hemoglobin.docalice22/02/2010
ossigeno acqua.jpggp17/04/2007
Hb dis-curve.jpggp05/04/2007
fetal_hemoglobin.gifgp05/04/2007
pO2 Hb Mb.gifgp05/04/2007
pO2 Hb.gifgp05/04/2007
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