Doctor Paul,
I have been thinking some more about this problem. I found the evidence you were lacking that states that the blood in the lungs reaches equilibrium in 0.3 seconds (
http://www.uel.ac.uk/life-sciences/resources/pph243-respiration.htm) so it seems that you are right, the ppO2 in the lungs will be reflected quickly in the brain. There is an interesting effect associated with the haemoglobin (sort of). In one of your other posts (I cant find it at the moment), you gave a very nice description of the oxygen cascade as it enters our cells. I found other descriptions on the web which agreed with you. There you said that the ppO2 in our blood is about 100 Torr (0.13 bar), on the web I found that it is about 40 Torr (0.05 bar) in our veins (i.e. after the O2 required for metabolism has been delivered to its destination). At
http://www.mtsinai.org/pulmonary/ABG/PO2.htm I found this formula for the O2 content of blood:
CaO2 = Hb (g/dl) x 1.34 ml O2/g Hb x SaO2 + PaO2 x (.003 ml O2/mm Hg/dl)
Or in metric
CaO2 = Hb (g/dl) x 1.34 ml O2/g Hb x SaO2 + PaO2 x (2.28 ml/dl/bar)
CaO2 is the O2 content of arterial blood; SaO2, the fractional saturation of the haemoglobin; PaO2 the partial pressure of O2 in the arterial blood. Hb is haemoglobin and Hg is mercury.
Reading off the graph found in the document above which shows blood oxygen content for haemoglobin contents of 10 and 15g/dl (
http://www.mtsinai.org/pulmonary/ABG/O2curve-large.jpg) and assuming 15 g haemoglobin per 100 ml of blood (typical for a man), we can see that approximately 6 ml of O2 are delivered to the body by 100 ml of blood. I postulate that the ppO2 in our tissues must be less than or equal to that in our veins (otherwise it would never have got that low in our veins the O2 has to have a partial pressure gradient to make it go anywhere). Now assuming the amount of O2 required by our bodies is constant over time (= nice relaxing dive), as we descend, and the ppO2 increases more and more of this can be delivered by simple solution in the plasma. Im too lazy to work out a model for the PaO2 based on inspired ppO2 so lets assume they are equal. If that is the case, in order to deliver 6 ml of O2 by simple solution we would have to inspire air with a ppO2 = 6/2.28 = 2.6 bar. (I have ignored the 3% unsaturated Hb in arterial blood at ppO2 100 Torr and the residual O2 in solution in the venous blood for simplicity and on the basis that they roughly cancel each other out.) Since we are delivering all of the O2 via the plasma and not via the haemoglobin, the haemoglobin remains saturated (97% at least) and therefore the ppO2 in the venous blood must be about 100 Torr (= 0.13 bar). So, the interesting effect I was talking about is that despite an increase of 2.4 bar in the ppO2 in the lungs, the ppO2 in the tissues has only increased by 0.08 bar, not much at all (albeit 160% higher than it had been at the surface when breathing ppO2 0.21 bar). Of course now if the ppO2 increases further, the ppO2 in our venous blood and I assume therefore tissues also, will increase at roughly the same rate as the inspired ppO2 because the haemoglobin is always saturated and can no longer absorb the extra O2, preventing the ppO2 increase. If we breathe ppO2 3 bar then I suggest the ppO2 in our tissues will be 3-2.6 = 0.4 bar. (The 2.6 difference comes from the 6 ml of O2 that gets metabolised.) So there you have it. I am not sure where this leaves us. I venture to suggest that it means a brief spike in ppO2 is not really dangerous unless it goes above 2.6 bar.
Any more thoughts?
I suppose I didn't really address the sensor thing, but I agree with you, it must be sensor delays - are the sensors "flow-through"? If they are not then I would expect delays of a few minutes perhaps due to diffusion. And I don't know anything about heliox diving (then again, a month ago I didn't know anything about haemoglobin either), I'll have to postpone that one for later, perhaps devjr could help us?
Piscean.
P.S. A joke for Dr. Paul:
Q:What did the rebreather diver say when his ppO2 dropped to 0?
A:I think I'm going to Suffolk....
(Suffolk, suffoc...ate get it? )
