The Oxygen Hemoglobin Dissociation Curve EXPLAINED!

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  • čas přidán 30. 06. 2024
  • Breaking down the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve. 📝 Free Quiz: adv.icu/3b3ihLn
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    There is a special relationship that exists in our blood between the amount of oxygen thats available and the percentage of hemoglobin that is saturated. This relationship is often represented as a graph which we commonly refer to as the oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve. Depending where our patient is on the curve it can tell us different things, as well as we have physiologic changes that take place, both naturally at different parts in the body as well as a result of various disease or other external processes that can alter this relationship. These alterations can result in right shift or left shift of the curve and have very different effects on the use and availability of oxygen.
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    0:00 Intro
    1:58 Hemoglobin Saturation
    4:18 Partial Pressure
    5:06 The Curve
    9:13 Right Shift
    11:28 Left Shift
    13:00 Shifting Curves
    14:47 Wrap up
    #ICUAdvantage #Oxygen #Hemoglobin

Komentáře • 75

  • @ICUAdvantage
    @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem +3

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  • @jtone123456
    @jtone123456 Před rokem +36

    this is literally the first time I have heard this explained as a dynamic physiologic process, in different stages throughout the metabolic process, as opposed to a stagnant "state of being". It makes soooooo much more sense now.

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem

      Right on man. Really glad this was able to help it click. Yeah its interesting how the changing physiology in the body causes these shifts depending where you are, but it makes sense!

  • @Anuragyadavhand
    @Anuragyadavhand Před 6 měsíci +5

    Broo i am in 11 class
    And you just make me understand the whole concept
    I wish that more teachers like you teach on CZcams.
    👍

  • @fatimaalazzeh667
    @fatimaalazzeh667 Před 4 měsíci +2

    A as much I wanted to cry cause I couldn’t understand this concept. I want to hug you and thank you. May Allah bless you your explanation is perfect. You saved my life. Thank you ❤😭😍

  • @melikibrahim723
    @melikibrahim723 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Thank you so much!
    So many other channels who explain it just dump it on you and say they made it easy to memorise... You're one of the only channels who explained it with the physiology so that I could properly understand its relevance to clinical practice!

  • @lalalabrianna
    @lalalabrianna Před 9 měsíci +7

    This was a top tier explanation, i've never heard of this concept until studying for CCRN, and oh my god very very intriguing! THANK YOU!

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před 9 měsíci

      This is awesome. Really glad to be able to help!

  • @BarnBaby100
    @BarnBaby100 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I'm an RVT studying for anesthesia specialty boards, this was so helpful! Thought you might find it neat to know your videos are helping animal patients, as well as human patients :)

  • @micahzuk1919
    @micahzuk1919 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the video! This REALLY helped my understanding of the oxyhemoglobin disassociation curve! Big help! Thanks again!

  • @user-qk4qw6sb3x
    @user-qk4qw6sb3x Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you so much ! I needed this for my accelerated nursing program. we just started on respiratory/ gas excchange.

  • @mariaperez08360
    @mariaperez08360 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you for much for explaining this in ways that I am able to understand.

  • @ANNREBECCAASIO
    @ANNREBECCAASIO Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this video, it has been of great help😍

  • @bassamalbarkawi6560
    @bassamalbarkawi6560 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you so much for making it truly easy to understand!!

  • @taimitchell5148
    @taimitchell5148 Před 8 měsíci

    Great Explanation! Thank you !

  • @maroo4601
    @maroo4601 Před 11 měsíci

    amazing explanation, very clear

  • @camilanicole3254
    @camilanicole3254 Před 4 měsíci

    Awesome video king!

  • @Daniprincesita28
    @Daniprincesita28 Před 15 dny

    Such an amazing video! great explanations thank you

  • @mwakakasanga8963
    @mwakakasanga8963 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you so much. Well understood now.

  • @nia-ss5fq
    @nia-ss5fq Před 5 měsíci +1

    This is the best explanation. Totally makes sense now. Thank you 👍🙂

  • @chaikristinjournals
    @chaikristinjournals Před rokem +2

    I had to go over this so many times for my CCRN but you made it so much easier to learn!! Thank you :)

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem +1

      So great to hear this! Glad I was able to break it down in a way that made sense. Appreciate you taking the time to leave a comment.

  • @roland.j.ruttledge
    @roland.j.ruttledge Před rokem +1

    Brilliant, as ever. Have saved for when I become more intelligent!! For now me and my pulse ox have something to aim for! Many thanks as always, Roland UK

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem +2

      lol Roland! Good to see ya pop in and glad you enjoyed it. Its always a topic that was tough to grasp until I had it explained well to me. Hope I was able to help some.

  • @clydetubal600
    @clydetubal600 Před rokem

    I was just reviewing this concept a couple days ago, haha. Thanks for helping solidify my learning with this vid 😃

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem

      Haha nice. I love it when the timing works out!

  • @alioid3919
    @alioid3919 Před 4 měsíci

    Smoothest yet most useful explanation thanks !!!

  • @shafter164
    @shafter164 Před rokem +3

    Excellent vid once again and really helped get us listeners more depth on the curve. One thing if I could suggest it is (for us in the UK) it might be nice when talking about partial presures to also add the measurement in kPa as we don't look at it in mmHg. Might help someone but I guess it's not too hard to convert... Thanks again ICU Advntg...

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem +1

      Glad to hear the lesson was put together well for you and that you found it helpful.
      As for your suggestion, I think the problem may be that I often don't know these differences even exist as they aren't something that I use or deal with so they don't cross my mind as a possibility.

    • @michaeldonne561
      @michaeldonne561 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Mate, it's a very well put together and free video explaining a quite hard to understand process. Minimum effort to just do your own conversions to be honest.

  • @ezrahayward4212
    @ezrahayward4212 Před 3 měsíci

    Super helpful

  • @unliuniverse2999
    @unliuniverse2999 Před 8 měsíci

    You explain very well. I have an exam next week.I am just curious about how you look like. 😊Hope you read this haha. Kudos to you sir🎉🎉

  • @Motivationtosuccess-qs7ih
    @Motivationtosuccess-qs7ih Před 10 měsíci

    You just had a new subscriber ,lol thanks

  • @abrahamadelagun4290
    @abrahamadelagun4290 Před 10 dny

    Thanks

  • @henriquelopes9596
    @henriquelopes9596 Před rokem

    Thanks!

  • @juliawithnell2188
    @juliawithnell2188 Před rokem

    So glad you covered this topic. I have a suggestion for a topic since you talked about this. Hypoxic Drive Theory Myth or Fact or a little of both

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem +1

      Glad you liked it Julia. Let me stew on that suggestion.

    • @juliawithnell2188
      @juliawithnell2188 Před rokem

      @@ICUAdvantage I have listened to alot of your videos and it helped me study for my Adult Critical Care Specialist exam. Your topics are easy to learn when you explain it.

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem

      So great to hear this! Thank you!

  • @viviliberton6196
    @viviliberton6196 Před rokem

    I've always had a problem in understanding what exactly is PaO2. So if I'm correct it is the arterial content of O2, so the dissolved O2 seen as a pressure. It doesn't represent the amount of O2 on hemoglobin? We use PaO2 as 'the given amount of oxygen' on the X-axis, but how does a PaO2 decide the saturation, is it a kind of marker of how much O2 enters the body through the lung? I'm overthinking this, but I've always struggled with these basics.

  • @Amanda.c91
    @Amanda.c91 Před rokem +3

    Maybe a video on alcohol withdrawal next?? CIWA exam, why the symptoms occur and meds given for minor to severe DTs. 🙂

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the suggestions Amanda. 😊 I do have ETOH WD on the todo list, but not sure when I'm going to get to it yet.

  • @adamlink8527
    @adamlink8527 Před rokem

    What role does dissolved oxygen(PaO2) play in the body? Does dissolved oxygen(PaO2) replenish and bind to the hemoglobin molecules that have already used their bound oxygen?

  • @majmat
    @majmat Před rokem +1

    I've just survived extremely low haemoglobin levels of 3.1g/dL or 31 g/L in the UK, where i am. I got released today and have been in since last Tuesday. My heart was failing, my ankles swelled right up and i could only walk a few steps before i was gasping for air. This has happened very slowly over the last 2 years, my GP thought it was my COPD getting worse, but sent me for a blood test for my liver function and a CT scan last December. I've just had another CT scan on Friday and all is clear, i'm waiting for a gastroscopy as an out patient. I might not of been up taking enough iron as i had 4 units of blood and an iron infusion and at my last blood test it was only at 8.9 g/dL or 89 g/L UK on Saturday as i'm very hard to get blood out of, i'm like a stone. They've put me on iron tablets and everything should go back to normal within the next week. I'm lucky to be alive as it was 1 of the lowest levels they've ever seen, 1 DR told me the only lower test they've seen was in a 96 year old who passed away at 2.6.

    • @jouvertalandwa5337
      @jouvertalandwa5337 Před rokem

      Keep going. All will be well

    • @majmat
      @majmat Před rokem +1

      @@jouvertalandwa5337 Thanks, i feel loads better and can actually do stuff i couldn't for the last year, so hopefully i can get my life back and start doing things i used to do.

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem

      Wow, thanks for sharing and glad you are still here. Hopefully they get everything figured out for you. 3.1 is definitely one of the lowest seen, especially to survive.

  • @touseefbeig915
    @touseefbeig915 Před 7 měsíci

    Nice

  • @kelseycorbin9265
    @kelseycorbin9265 Před rokem

    What are your thoughts about placing the finger pulse oximetry on the forehead or ear and potentially inaccuracies

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem

      Great question Kelsey.
      I think its probably less of a concern on the ear. I haven't seen much evidence though in the way of an inaccuracies with that or the forehead even. I know in personal experience the forehead has been tough to get to read with a finger sticky probe.
      I guess ultimately, if we have the equipment that is designed for that spot, use it, otherwise, if its all we have, well its all we have. And I'm sure we aren't going this route because things are working fine on a finger or toe lol.
      Whenever in doubt, wait until you have a good reading and a good pleth and then compare that to an ABG and that'll tell you if its accurate.

  • @nataliafernandez-montenegr8936

    Wait I’m confused with what you say at 14:14, so if a patient is in metabolic acidosis and we correct said acidosis, we would make it harder for tissue to get O2? But shouldn’t we still need to correct the acidosis?

    • @kalaowens1865
      @kalaowens1865 Před rokem +2

      it depends on the patient. sometimes they will allow what's called "permissive hypercapnia" in certain patients because the increased level of CO2 allows for them to perfuse better because oxygen is more readily available with higher partial pressure of CO2 or decreased pH. However, if the patient is extremely unstable because of their acidosis, it would not benefit them because hemodynamic instability will negatively impact their perfusion. So they might not have oxygen as readily available in a leftward shift, but they are able to utilize that oxygen that is bound more efficiently because they are hemodynamically stable.
      I hope that makes sense, I am not an expert so if I am wrong, someone else definitely chime in hahaha

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem +1

      So Kala is right on.
      I was merely mentioning about this scenario and the consequences of such. We certainly, and often do, allow a slight acidosis and usually don't correct past 7.2 as the body tolerates this well. That said, if they are 7.1, 7.0 or less, we are going to need to correct this back towards 7.2 but it is important to know there will be consequences too that will need to be accounted for.
      In one example, we may need to increase DO2 to compensate for this. Perhaps increased perfusion from more effective pressors in a less acidic environment might be enough to do this, but we may also need to increased FiO2 or PEEP being delivered.
      Sorry for the confusion, but I just gave a couple examples to know that there are "down stream" effects from the things we do and that we need to think of these to be able to anticipate other potential issues that come up. Sometimes we are damned if we do and damned if we don't.

  • @saleheentahmeed4454
    @saleheentahmeed4454 Před rokem

    Good

  • @acmb364
    @acmb364 Před rokem

    I admit...
    that I don't get it. It seems to me that this graph shows an "associative" curve. So how quick O2 binds to Hb.

  • @jenniferpiazza563
    @jenniferpiazza563 Před 21 dnem

    Does anyone know how to access the notes?

  • @victormwimanzi8352
    @victormwimanzi8352 Před 6 dny

    I'm a sickle cell patient looking to getting the new gene therapy that will reverse my hemoglobin to fetal hemeglobin and I don't understand this video in context of sickle cell

  • @hosseinabedinifard539
    @hosseinabedinifard539 Před 6 měsíci

    🙏🙏🙏

  • @dailydoseofmedicinee
    @dailydoseofmedicinee Před rokem

    👍

  • @mohamedabdelaleem895
    @mohamedabdelaleem895 Před rokem

    What is the program you use for making those wonderful videos

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem +1

      I use Adobe Photoshop, screencast to an iPad with Apple Pencil for the writing.

  •  Před rokem

    10:57 *2,3-BPG

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem

      Semantics depending on who is talking about it. BPG and DPG used interchangeably

  • @Mrjacksonll
    @Mrjacksonll Před rokem

    typo in the thumbnail!

    • @ICUAdvantage
      @ICUAdvantage  Před rokem

      Ahhhh yes! Thanks for that. I need to get that fixed.

  • @arzhangsadeghi
    @arzhangsadeghi Před 4 měsíci

    you are making a big mistake here , Oxygen saturation measures how much hemoglobin is currently bound to oxygen compared to how much hemoglobin remains unbound not how much oxygen is bound to the Hb simply it is the amount of Hb bound to oxygen not the amount of oxygen bound to Hb.

  • @gilbertinabrozina8382

    ƤRO𝓂O𝕤ᗰ

  • @colinrobert-kv2up
    @colinrobert-kv2up Před 2 měsíci

    Blood memory, same binding contract, iron in blood makes current in vain, melted lungs sacks bags hardened, less, but more transfer of chemical exchanges, forahydrocarbon, agents, smirked in blood, separateation, levels in closed, bag, 5 min exchanges some gulp of air, mixes broke existence, seen real, the invisible to visible, while effects of ? The time shifting too me slow motion detection yous, not me quicker you think, but slower all time is different for kinds, ghost reading guess time shift not here or shadow images, 7D time, in blood separateation levels of blood separate, as void mixers, force of gravity, same in space instant death, gravity waves instant death, star shifts ,red star,blue star popular stats, hulls of Craft saturation of nebula, invisible kinds comings,,gases, deep sea maths scared me.

  • @weslietadiwa9231
    @weslietadiwa9231 Před 9 měsíci

    Nice