Originally Posted by sameeralord
No no not assignment. I have given my own explanation for each question. This is not homework help. 
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Okay then. Just checking; these sound like the sort of questions I might torture my students with.
Originally Posted by sameeralord
1. Anatomic dead space and residual volume?
I know what anatomic dead space is but residual volume is confusing me. Is it in the conducting zone as well and non technically isn't it like some kind of anatomic dead space.
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Anatomic dead space is in the air passages; the portion of air that never gets to the lungs (i.e., in the trachea, bronchi, bronchioles). Residual volume is the air left in the lungs that can't be forcibly exhaled.
2. Why does the alveoli have less partial pressure of oxygen than inspired air? I can understand how addition of water vapour can reduce it but residual volume just confused me. Does oxygen from residual volume get mixed with this as well increasing P02.
3. Why does the expired air have higher P02 of oxygen than alveoli?
I can understand how mixing with dead space would archieve it. Does the residual volume affect it as well. Residual volume is confusing me.
4. What creates the P02 in arterial blood and why it is 95?
So it is basically oxygen dissolved in blood right that causes the partial pressure of oxygen.We consider the haemoglobin bind oxygen as part of dissolved blood right? 95 is due to shunting right?
5. Why is PC02 in alveoli 40 and what creates PC02 in arterial blood?
Is it 40 in alveoli because CO2 diffuses into it from the capillaries. So C02 from tissues goes to capillarie-->veins--->capillaries---->alveoli so from where does arterial PC02 come from.
Your help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks 
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I thought this was going to be easy to answer, and then I looked again at your diagram. Where did you get it from? It's quite misleading the way it is drawn, because it doesn't represent that pulmonary veins contain the oxygenated blood returning to the heart to be distributed to the body via the systemic arteries, and then systemic veins return low-oxygenated and higher CO
2 blood to the heart for return to the lungs via pulmonary arteries. It seems to mix up the concepts of arteries and veins in a very confusing way.
Generally, the concept to understand is that partial pressures of gases are traveling in a concentration gradient from high to low as gas exchange occurs. Oxygen is picked up from air at higher levels than carbon dioxide, because air has a higher partial pressure of oxygen than carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide gets picked up by venous blood from the tissues as a waste product.
The reason you don't see a large difference in CO
2 between venous and arterial blood, like you do for O
2, is that a lot of the CO
2 is maintained as bicarbonate in the blood, not as free CO
2 or bound to hemoglobin.