Pulse Oximetry & the Oxygen–Haemoglobin Dissociation Curve

post by leggi · 2020-03-22T07:05:53.483Z · LW · GW · 3 comments

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3 comments

Since I can't post an image in a comment I've created this post.

I've seen a fair bit written about digital oxymeters (pulse ox) and percentage figures but no mention of the underlying physiology to increase understanding of the significance of those figures.

Haemoglobin (in red blood cells) takes up oxygen in the lungs to then carry around the body.

Oxygen disassociates from haemoglobin (Hb) when the partial pressure of O2 in surrounding tissues is reduced according to this graph:

Note the steep drop in oxygen saturation (the % given by an oximeter) when PO2 (level of oxygen in surrounding tissues) is low i.e. a lot of oxygen leaves red blood cells quickly at those levels so there isn't enough oxygen in the blood to get round everywhere.

SOURCE: (and much more info.)

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comment by Pattern · 2020-03-22T19:19:33.166Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
Since I can't post an image in a comment I've created this post.

Where's the comment that links to this?

Replies from: leggi
comment by leggi · 2020-03-23T06:29:20.507Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

get a pulse oximeter [LW(p) · GW(p)]I think is the original comment.

Included on the justified advice thread [LW · GW].

A discussion on the what to do when infected thread [LW(p) · GW(p)] was the prompt yesterday, (I'm not skilled enough to be able to link to the comment directly).

comment by leggi · 2020-03-23T06:25:36.578Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

posted a comment instead of reply. please delete