This blog is intended for students in the health sciences and other students with an interest in cardiovascular, pulmonary and renal physiology and pathophysiology. It is a compilation of original contributions as well as notes I have taken during lectures on these topics and clinical lectures. At the bottom of each post is a box for comments that you are invited to use. Steve Wood, PhD, swood60@gmail.com teaching website: http://www.cvpulmrenal.com
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
Excerpts from the novel "Oxygen"
The entire complex human machine pivots on the pinnacle of oxygen. The bucket brigade of energy metabolism that keeps us all alive ends with oxygen as the final electron acceptor. Take it away, and the cascade clogs up in minutes, backing up the whole precisely tuned engine until it collapses, choked, cold and blue.
Two portals connect us to oxygen—the mouth and the nose—appreciated more for all their other uses: tasting, smelling, smiling, whistling, blowing smoke and blowing kisses, supporting sunglasses and lipstick designers, perfumeries and plastic surgeons. Seal them for the duration of the morning weather report and everything you had planned for the rest of your life evaporates in a puff of imagination.
From the novel, Oxygen
By Carol Wiley Cassella, MD
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