80-100
PvO2 = 40mm Hg, PvCO2 = 46mmHg
PO2(OH)2 is the same as H2PO4^- (note the negative charge). It would be dihydrogen phosphate.
PO2 IS THE OYGEN BLOOD LEVEL IN YOUR BODY (More specifically, pO2 is the partial pressure of oxygen in different parts of your body. For example, the partial pressure of oxygen (pO2) is higher in your lungs than it is in various tissues like muscles. Therefore, oxygen is absorbed in the lungs and dispersed through your muscles.)
Rather than a blood vessel with a value of 104mm Hg for Po2, it is alveolar gas thatt has a Po2 of 104 mm Hg
PO2 in blood is the amount of gases in your blood. In medical terms, this is commonly called the Alveolar-arterial.
In pulmonary arteries, PO2 is around 40 mmHg and PCO2 is around 46 mmHg. In pulmonary veins, PO2 is around 100 mmHg and PCO2 is around 40 mmHg. In systemic arteries, PO2 is around 100 mmHg and PCO2 is around 40 mmHg. In systemic veins, PO2 is around 40 mmHg and PCO2 is around 46 mmHg.
PO2 refers to the partial pressure of oxygen in the blood, typically measured via arterial blood gas analysis. SpO2, on the other hand, represents the oxygen saturation level in the blood, measured non-invasively through pulse oximetry. In simpler terms, PO2 shows how much oxygen is dissolved in the blood, while SpO2 indicates the percentage of hemoglobin carrying oxygen.
In healthy subjects the mean PCO2 fall 18 mm Hg from the baseline and mean PO2 rise 7 mmHg
It means that you blood is not carrying enough oxygen for your whole body and brain to work well. A level of above 95 is satisfactory. Brain uses most oxygen in the whole body
what is the normal sugar level
When H3PO4 equals H2PO4-, the solution is a buffer system. The pH of the solution would be around the pKa of the H3PO4/H2PO4- buffer system, which is around 7.2-7.4 for the first dissociation of phosphoric acid.