Why most of the co2 is carried out by the water if RBCs than plasma?
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Carbon dioxide is transported in the blood in three ways: (i) dissolved in solution; (ii) buffered with water as carbonic acid; (iii) bound to proteins, particularly haemoglobin.
At a haemoglobin concentration of 15 g dl−1, mixed venous .
6.1 kPa contains 52 ml dl−1 of carbon dioxide; arterial boiled.
5.3 kPa contains 48 ml dl−1.
The effects of carbon dioxide production in the tissues include: increased plasma Cl−; increased red blood cell mean corpuscular volume; and haemoglobin becoming less acidotic than oxygenated haemoglobin.
At a haemoglobin concentration of 15 g dl−1, mixed venous .
6.1 kPa contains 52 ml dl−1 of carbon dioxide; arterial boiled.
5.3 kPa contains 48 ml dl−1.
The effects of carbon dioxide production in the tissues include: increased plasma Cl−; increased red blood cell mean corpuscular volume; and haemoglobin becoming less acidotic than oxygenated haemoglobin.
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