Author:
Petersson Johan,Glenny Robb W.
Abstract
This review provides an overview of the relationship between ventilation/perfusion ratios and gas exchange in the lung, emphasising basic concepts and relating them to clinical scenarios. For each gas exchanging unit, the alveolar and effluent blood partial pressures of oxygen and carbon dioxide (PO2andPCO2) are determined by the ratio of alveolar ventilation to blood flow (V′A/Q′) for each unit. Shunt and lowV′A/Q′ regions are two examples ofV′A/Q′ mismatch and are the most frequent causes of hypoxaemia. Diffusion limitation, hypoventilation and low inspiredPO2cause hypoxaemia, even in the absence ofV′A/Q′ mismatch. In contrast to other causes, hypoxaemia due to shunt responds poorly to supplemental oxygen. Gas exchanging units with little or no blood flow (highV′A/Q′ regions) result in alveolar dead space and increased wasted ventilation,i.e.less efficient carbon dioxide removal. Because of the respiratory drive to maintain a normal arterialPCO2, the most frequent result of wasted ventilation is increased minute ventilation and work of breathing, not hypercapnia. Calculations of alveolar–arterial oxygen tension difference, venous admixture and wasted ventilation provide quantitative estimates of the effect ofV′A/Q′ mismatch on gas exchange. The types ofV′A/Q′ mismatch causing impaired gas exchange vary characteristically with different lung diseases.
Publisher
European Respiratory Society (ERS)
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Cited by
241 articles.
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