Hypoxia

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Hypoxia

ER Nursing Week 2

ER Nursing Week 2

Heart failure: Clinical
Cardiac work
Frank-Starling relationship
Atrial fibrillation
Regulation of pulmonary blood flow
Respiratory alkalosis
Respiratory system anatomy and physiology
Respiratory acidosis
Metabolic and respiratory alkalosis: Clinical
Acute respiratory distress syndrome: Clinical
Respiratory distress syndrome: Pathology review
Upper respiratory tract infection
Acute respiratory distress syndrome
Metabolic and respiratory acidosis: Clinical
Ventilation
Lung cancer
Standards of care for COVID-19 patients
Cardiovascular system anatomy and physiology
Introduction to the cardiovascular system
Control of blood flow circulation
Coronary circulation
Aortic valve disease
Resistance to blood flow
Heart failure
Heart failure: Pathology review
Normal heart sounds
Heart blocks: Pathology review
Abnormal heart sounds
Valvular heart disease: Clinical
Cardiac conduction system
Anatomy of the heart
Valvular heart disease: Pathology review
Rheumatic heart disease
Anatomy clinical correlates: Heart
Left-sided heart failure: Nursing process (ADPIE)
Post-COVID syndrome: Heart, lungs and clotting
Pericardial disease: Pathology review
Tuberculosis: Pathology review
Myocarditis
Dilated cardiomyopathy
Coronary artery disease: Pathology review
Myocardial infarction
ECG cardiac infarction and ischemia
Knowledge Shot: Is Santa Claus at risk of a heart attack
Coronary artery disease: Clinical
Pericarditis and pericardial effusion
Ischemia
Excitability and refractory periods
Antiplatelet medications
Non-corticosteroid immunosuppressants and immunotherapies
Aortic dissection
Aortic aneurysms and dissections: Clinical
Coronary steal syndrome
Venous thromboembolism: Clinical
Pericardial disease: Clinical
Carbon dioxide transport in blood
Zones of pulmonary blood flow
Hypertension: Clinical
Tricuspid valve disease
Sympatholytics: Alpha-2 agonists
Calcium channel blockers
Hypoplastic left heart syndrome
Positive inotropic medications
Familial hypercholesterolemia
Hyperlipidemia
Hypoxia
Laryngitis
Bacterial epiglottitis
Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
Atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT)
Marfan syndrome
Brugada syndrome
Action potentials in pacemaker cells
Cardiomyopathies: Clinical
Long QT syndrome and Torsade de pointes
Atrioventricular block
Infective endocarditis: Clinical
Bundle branch block
Peripheral artery disease
Arterial disease
Peripheral vascular disease: Clinical
Cardiac tamponade
Cardiac contractility
ECG cardiac hypertrophy and enlargement
Aortic dissections and aneurysms: Pathology review
Deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism: Pathology review
Pulmonary embolism
Stable angina
Angina pectoris
Prinzmetal angina
Ludwig angina
Unstable angina
Aneurysms
Pleural effusion
Obstructive lung diseases: Pathology review
Pneumonia: Clinical
Emphysema
Imaging features of COVID-19 (LifeBridge Health)

Transcript

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So by this point, you’re probably aware that your body needs oxygen to survive, right?

In fact, every cell in your body needs that precious oxygen.

Those cells use the oxygen to produce energy in the form of ATP, or adenosine triphosphate, a super super important molecule, sometimes even called “the molecular unit of currency”.

The cells use it to basically pay the molecules inside the cell to do their specific jobs.

It’s like one big factory with a bunch of workers that all have specific jobs needed to run the factory, and they only take ATP as payment.

Now the mitochondrion of the cell takes in oxygen and makes ATP to pay the workers, through a process called oxidative phosphorylation, the mitochondrion’s like the factory’s payroll department, right?

When the cell doesn’t get enough oxygen, and so payroll can’t produce the ATP that they need to pay the workers to do their jobs, the whole cellular factory can be damaged or even die, and we call that process hypoxia, where hypo means “less than normal” and oxia means “oxygenation”.

When the oxygen comes in, typically it goes straight to payroll, specifically to the inner mitochondrial membrane where oxidative phosphorylation takes place.

Oxygen’s used in one of the last steps, and serves as an electron acceptor, and this allows the process to finish and produce ATP.

So without oxygen, we can’t finish oxidative phosphorylation and produce ATP.

But why does the whole factory fall apart when payroll stops making ATP? Why don’t they just pause for a bit? Take a little break?

Well, when certain workers stop doing their jobs...things get a little out of hand.

One super important worker is the sodium potassium pump on the cell’s membrane, pretty much like the bouncer that makes sure there isn’t too much sodium diffusing into the cell, basically by pumping it back out every time it diffuses in and maintaining a concentration gradient, this process also keeps too many water molecules from passively diffusing into the cell; think of it like this: water molecules want to go every which way and are constantly moving back and forth, inside and outside the cell, but the all these sodium ions on this side tend to physically block more of them from leaving that side, so over time more water molecules get retained, or almost trapped, on the side with more sodium—in short, the more sodium molecules: the more water molecules.

But, our pump doesn’t do all this for free, and it needs ATP.

So without ATP, it stops pumping sodium back out, and sodium diffuses in...and keeps diffusing in and the concentration gradient goes away, now with less sodium particles on the outside blocking the water molecules from going into the cell, water follows sodium in, which causes the cell to swell up.

When the cell swells up, a couple things happen.

First, usually you have these really tiny microvilli on the cell’s membrane, which look sort of like little fingers that help increase the cell’s surface area and therefore help the cell absorb more things, when the cell swells up and gets all bloated, the water sort of fills these little fingers and reduces the surface area, which makes it harder to absorb molecules since there’s less surface area, right?

Also, sort of along the same lines, the cell can bleb, or bulge outward from all this water, this is a sign that the cell’s cytoskeleton or this structural framework is beginning to fail, and is letting water slip through.

Sources

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