Oxygen Toxicity - Basics & Breath Woes
Oxygen toxicity refers to the adverse physiological effects resulting from breathing molecular oxygen ($O_2$) at elevated partial pressures ($P_{O_2}$), leading to hyperoxia-induced cellular damage.
- Types & Thresholds:
- CNS Toxicity (Paul Bert Effect): Acute. $P_{O_2}$ > 1.6 ATA.
- Pulmonary Toxicity (Lorrain Smith Effect): Chronic. Prolonged $P_{O_2}$ > 0.5 ATA.
⭐ The two main forms of oxygen toxicity are CNS toxicity (Paul Bert effect), occurring rapidly at $P_{O_2}$ > 1.6 ATA, and pulmonary toxicity (Lorrain Smith effect), developing over longer exposures at $P_{O_2}$ > 0.5 ATA.
- Pathophysiology:
- ↑ $P_{O_2}$ → ↑ Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS): $O_2^-$, $H_2O_2$, $OH^•$.
- ROS overwhelm antioxidant defenses → oxidative stress.
- Effects:
- Lipid peroxidation (membrane damage).
- Enzyme inactivation.
- ↓ Surfactant (pulmonary toxicity) → atelectasis.
Oxygen Toxicity - Signs & Symptoms Spotlight
- CNS Toxicity (Paul Bert Effect): Acute, occurs at >2-3 ATA $O_2$.
- Symptoms: 📌 CONVENTID
- Convulsions
- Visual disturbances (tunnel vision)
- Ear (tinnitus)
- Nausea
- Twitching (esp. facial, lips)
- Irritability/Anxiety
- Dizziness/Vertigo
- Prodromal symptoms (e.g., anxiety, twitching, nausea) often precede seizures.
- Symptoms: 📌 CONVENTID
- Pulmonary Toxicity (Lorrain Smith Effect): Chronic, with prolonged exposure to >0.5 ATA $O_2$ (typically >24-48 hours).
- Early: Substernal discomfort/pain, dry cough, dyspnea on exertion.
- Progressive: Dyspnea at rest, ↓ vital capacity, tracheobronchitis.
- Late: ARDS-like picture, pulmonary edema, fibrosis.
⭐ The 📌 CONVENTID mnemonic (Convulsions, Visual changes, Ear ringing, Nausea, Twitching, Irritability, Dizziness) is key for recalling CNS oxygen toxicity symptoms, which often precede seizures.
Oxygen Toxicity - Danger Zones & Defenses
- Risk Factors: High inspired $P_{O_2}$, ↑exposure duration, $CO_2$ retention, exercise, fever, hyperthyroidism, individual susceptibility.
- Prevention:
- Limit $P_{O_2}$ & duration (e.g., Oxygen Tolerance Units - OTU, UPTD).
- Use 'air breaks' during hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) and prolonged normobaric hyperoxia.
- Antioxidants (experimental).
- Management Overview:
⭐ Intermittent 'air breaks' (breathing normal air for 5-10 minutes every 20-30 minutes) significantly reduce risk of CNS & pulmonary oxygen toxicity during HBOT or prolonged high inspired oxygen fraction.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
Error: Failed to generate content for this concept group.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app