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1.
After single-lung transplantation (SLT) for emphysema, heterogeneity of ventilation distribution in the graft can be assessed by measuring the slope of the alveolar plateau, computed from a single-breath test, performed in lateral decubitus with this lung in the nondependent position. We tested the validity of this technique in patients with SLT for interstitial lung diseases (ILD). Twelve patients with SLT for ILD, 12 nontransplanted patients with ILD, and 10 healthy control subjects performed single-breath washouts in right and left lateral decubitus; nitrogen slope (S(N(2))) and the difference between SF(6) and He slopes (S(SF(6))-S(He)) were measured between 75 and 100% of expired volume. In 10 transplant recipients, the volume of each lung was measured in both postures by computerized tomography. Slopes were unaffected by posture in normal control subjects and patients with ILD. On the other hand, S(N(2)) and S(SF(6))-S(He) in transplant recipients were smaller with the graft in the nondependent than in the dependent position (0.366 +/- 0.445 vs. 1.035 +/- 0.498 for S(N(2)); 0.094 +/- 0.201 vs. 0.218 +/- 0.277 for S(SF(6))-S(He)). Values of S(N(2)) and S(SF(6))-S(He) obtained in the former position were similar to those obtained in normal controls, while values obtained in the latter position were similar to those obtained in nontransplanted patients with ILD. Computerized tomography studies with the graft in the nondependent position indicated that this lung contributed 82% of the volume expired below functional residual capacity. We conclude that, in patients with SLT for ILD, the slope of the alveolar plateau obtained with the graft in the nondependent position reflects heterogeneity of ventilation distribution in this lung.  相似文献   

2.
The phase III slope of sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) in a single-breath washout (SBW) is greater than that of helium (He) under normal gravity (i.e., 1G), thus resulting in a positive SF6-He slope difference. In microgravity (microG), SF6-He slope difference is smaller because of a greater fall in the phase III slope of SF6 than He. We sought to determine whether increasing thoracic fluid volume using 60 degrees head-down tilt (HDT) in 1G would produce a similar effect to microG on phase III slopes of SF6 and He. Single-breath vital capacity (SBW) and multiple-breath washout (MBW) tests were performed before, during, and 60 min after 1 h of HDT. Compared with baseline (SF6 1.050 +/- 0.182%/l, He 0.670 +/- 0.172%/l), the SBW phase III slopes for both SF6 and He tended to decrease during HDT, reaching nadir at 30 min (SF6 0.609 +/- 0.211%/l, He 0.248 +/- 0.138%/l; P = 0.08 and P = 0.06, respectively). In contrast to microG, the magnitude of the phase III slope decrease was similar for both SF6 and He; therefore, no change in SF6-He slope difference was observed. MBW analysis revealed a decrease in normalized phase III slopes at all time points during HDT, for both SF6 (P < 0.01) and He (P < 0.01). This decrease was due to changes in the acinar, and not the conductive, component of the normalized phase III slope. These findings support the notion that changes in thoracic fluid volume alter ventilation distribution in the lung periphery but also demonstrate that the effect during HDT does not wholly mimic that observed in microG.  相似文献   

3.
The predictions of a single-path trumpet-bell numerical model of steady-state CO2 and infused He and sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) washout were compared with experimental measurements on healthy human volunteers. The mathematical model used was a numerical solution of the classic airway convention-diffusion equation with the addition of a distributed source term at the alveolar end. In the human studies, a static sampling technique was used to measure the exhaled concentrations and phase III slopes of CO2, He, and SF6 during the intravenous infusion of saline saturated with a mixture of the two inert gases. We found good agreement between the experimentally determined normalized slopes (phase III slope divided by mixed expired concentration) and the numerically determined normalized slopes in the model with no free parameters other than the physiological ones of upper airway dead space, tidal volume, breathing frequency, and breathing pattern (sinusoidal). We conclude 1) that the single-path (Weibel) trumpet-bell anatomic model used in conjunction with the airway convection-diffusion equation with a distributed source term is adequate to describe the steady-state lung washout of CO2 and infused He and SF6 in normal lungs and 2) that the interfacial area separating the tidal volume fron from the functional residual capacity gas, through which gas diffusion into the moving tidal volume occurs, exerts a major effect on the normalized slopes of phase III.  相似文献   

4.
Subpleural concentrations of He and SF6 were measured during multiple-breath washouts from isolated dog lungs. Tidal volume, inspiratory flow, and frequency were in the normal range of canine ventilation. For each gas, there was a local minimum in concentration during inspiration (Cinsp) and a local maximum in concentration during exhalation (Cexp). SF6 exhibited a deeper inspiratory trough than He for each breath of every washout. For large tidal volumes (10-20 ml/kg), Cexp approximated a single exponential decay and He was cleared more rapidly than SF6. For small tidal volumes (2.5 ml/kg), Cexp was multiexponential and SF6 was cleared more rapidly than He. Cinsp/Cexp (a measure of the depth of the inspiratory trough) and the kinetics of Cexp decay were determined for washouts using a tidal volume of 10 and 20 ml/kg and different inspiratory flows. Under all conditions, an increase of inspiratory flow resulted in a deeper inspiratory trough for both He and SF6. For washouts using 10 ml/kg and 60 breaths/min, an increase of inspiratory flow increased the clearance of both gases. In washouts using lower ventilatory frequencies, gas clearance was independent of inspiratory flow. These findings are contrary to predictions of contemporary models of convection and diffusion in the lung. This study suggests that convective axial mixing and radial diffusion in the airways are important determinants of pulmonary gas transport.  相似文献   

5.
Simultaneously measured helium (He) and sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) single-breath washout was studied in 16 anesthetized paralyzed dogs ventilated with a special hydraulically operated ventilatory servo system. After equilibration of lung gas with 1% He and 1% SF6, the maneuver consisting of inspiration of a test gas-free mixture at constant rate (VI), a variable time of breath holding, and an expiration at constant rate (VE), was performed. Fractional concentrations of He and SF6, recorded against expired volume, were analyzed in terms of slope of the alveolar plateau (S) and series (Fowler) dead space (VD). In control conditions (VI = 0.5 l/s, VE = 0.1 l/s) S was about 10% of alveolar-to-inspired concentration difference per liter expirate both for He and SF6. Both SHe and SSF6 were inversely related to VI and VE, the relative changes being more pronounced with varying VE. SHe/SSF6 was higher or lower than unity depending on VI and VE. Both SHe and SSF6 decreased with increasing preinspiratory lung volume. Breath holding up to 10 s slightly decreased SHe and SSF6 while SHe/SSF6 was unchanged. The contribution of continuing gas exchange to S assessed from comparative measurements using the reversed (single breath washin) technique ranged from 6 to 23% in the various conditions. The VDHe/VDSF6 ratio was 0.84 and was little affected in the various settings. Results indicate that the substantial alveolar gas inhomogeneity in the dog lung and the mechanism accounting for S are little diffusion dependent. By exclusion sequential filling and emptying of lung units is believed to constitute the most important mechanism responsible for the sloping alveolar plateau.  相似文献   

6.
We performed single-breath washout (SBW) tests in which He and sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) were inspired throughout the vital capacity inspirations or were inhaled as discrete boluses at different points in the inspiration. Tests were performed in normal gravity (1 G) and in up to 27 s of microgravity (microG) during parabolic flight. The phase III slope of the SBW could be accurately reconstructed from individual bolus tests when allowance for airways closure was made. Bolus tests showed that most of the SBW phase III slope results from events during inspiration at lung volumes below closing capacity and near total lung capacity, as does the SF6-He phase III slope difference. Similarly, the difference between 1 G and microG in phase III slopes for both gases was entirely accounted for by gravity-dependent events at high and low lung volumes. Phase IV height was always larger for SF6 than for He, suggesting at least some airway closure in close proximity to airways that remain open at residual volume. These results help explain previous studies in microG, which show large changes in gas mixing in vital capacity maneuvers but only small effects in tidal volume breaths.  相似文献   

7.
Series (Fowler) dead space (VD) and slope of the alveolar plateau of two inert gases (He and SF6) with similar blood-gas partition coefficients (approximately 0.01) but different diffusivities were analyzed in 10 anesthetized paralyzed mechanically ventilated dogs (mean body wt 20 kg). Single-breath constant-flow expirograms were simultaneously recorded in two conditions: 1) after equilibration of lung gas with the inert gases at tracer concentrations [airway loading (AL)] and 2) during steady-state elimination of the inert gases continuously introduced into venous blood by a membrane oxygenator and partial arteriovenous bypass [venous loading (VL)]. VD was consistently larger for SF6 than for He, but there was no difference between AL and VL. The relative alveolar slope, defined as increment of partial pressure per increment of expired volume and normalized to mixed expired-inspired partial pressure difference, was larger by a factor of two in VL than in AL for both He and SF6. The He-to-SF6 ratio of relative alveolar slope was generally smaller than unity in both VL and AL. Whereas unequal ventilation-volume distribution combined with sequential emptying of parallel lung regions appears to be responsible for the sloping alveolar plateau during AL, the steeper slope during VL is attributed to the combined effects of continuing gas exchange and ventilation-perfusion inequality coupled with sequential emptying. The differences between He and SF6 point at the contributing role of diffusion-dependent mechanisms in intrapulmonary gas mixing.  相似文献   

8.
We studied the early response to ovalbumin challenge in sensitized Brown-Norway rats through its effect on N(2), He, and SF(6) phase III slopes of the single-breath washout and on indexes of lung function. Sensitized rats showed varying degrees of response in terms of pulmonary pressure (PL), with increases ranging between 125 and 225% of baseline. The sensitized rats presented decreased quasistatic compliance, forced vital capacity, and end-expiratory flow, with all three lung function indexes showing a significant negative correlation with corresponding PL values. They also showed significant positive correlations of PL with the N(2), He, and SF(6) phase III slopes, reflecting diffusion-convection-dependent inhomogeneities generated by conformation changes throughout the entire rat lung. In addition, the rats showing the most marked PL increases (>150% baseline PL) also revealed a reversal of the SF(6)-He slope difference because of a more marked SF(6) than He slope increase. This latter finding suggests that the degree of structural heterogeneity during early response is even more marked in the most peripheral rat lung generations.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of increased gravity in the head-to-foot direction (+G(z)) and pressurization of an anti-G suit (AGS) on total and intraregional intra-acinar ventilation inhomogeneity were explored in 10 healthy male subjects. They performed vital capacity (VC) single-breath washin/washouts of SF(6) and He in +1, +2, or +3 G(z) in a human centrifuge, with an AGS pressurized to 0, 6, or 12 kPa. The phase III slopes for SF(6) and He over 25-75% of the expired VC were used as markers of total ventilation inhomogeneity, and the (SF(6) -- He) slopes were used as indicators of intraregional intra-acinar inhomogeneity. SF(6) and He phase III slopes increased proportionally with increasing gravity, but the (SF(6) -- He) slopes remained unchanged. AGS pressurization did not change SF(6) or He slopes significantly but resulted in increased (SF(6) -- He) slope differences at 12 kPa. In conclusion, hypergravity increases overall but not intraregional intra-acinar inhomogeneity during VC breaths. AGS pressurization provokes increased intraregional intra-acinar ventilation inhomogeneity, presumably reflecting the consequences of basilar pulmonary vessel engorgement in combination with compression of the basilar lung regions.  相似文献   

10.
Cardiogenic oscillations in the expired partial pressure profiles of two inert gases (He and SF6) were monitored in seven anesthetized paralyzed mechanically ventilated dogs. He and SF6 were administered either intravenously by a membrane oxygenator and partial arteriovenous bypass [venous loading (VL)] or by washin into lung gas [airway loading (AL)]. The single-breath expirograms obtained during constant-flow expiration after inspiration of test gas-free air displayed distinct and regular cardiogenic oscillations. The relative oscillation amplitude (ROA), calculated as oscillation amplitude divided by mixed expired-inspired partial pressure difference, was in the range of 1-8%. The ROA for both He and SF6 was approximately 4.2 times higher in VL than in AL, which indicated that among lung units that emptied sequentially in the cardiac cycle, the effects of alveolar ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) inequality were more pronounced than those of alveolar ventilation-alveolar volume (VA/VA) inequality. In AL, He and SF6 oscillations were 180 degrees out of phase compared with CO2 and O2 oscillations and with He and SF6 oscillations in VL, which suggests that regions with low VA/VA had high VA/Q and very low Q/VA. The ROA was practically unaffected by breath holding in both AL and VL, which indicates that there was little diffusive or convective (cardiogenic) mixing between the lung units that were responsible for cardiogenic oscillations. The ROA was consistently higher for He than for SF6, and the He-to-SF6 ratio was independent of route of test gas loading, averaging 1.6 in both AL and VL. This result may be explained by laminar Taylor dispersion, whereby oscillations generated in peripheral lung regions are dissipated in inverse proportion to diffusion coefficient during transit through the proximal (larger) airways.  相似文献   

11.
To study the phenomenon of lung hyperinflation (LHI), i.e., an increase in lung volume without a concomitant rise in airway pressure, we measured lung volume changes in isolated dog lungs during high-frequency oscillation (HFO) with air, He, and SF6 and with mean tracheal pressure controlled at 2.5, 5.0, and 7.5 cmH2O. The tidal volume and frequency used were 1.5 ml/kg body wt and 20 Hz, respectively. LHI was observed during HFO in all cases except for a few trials with He. The degree of LHI was inversely related to mean tracheal pressure and varied directly with gas density. Maximum expiratory flow rate (Vmax) was measured during forced expiration induced by a vacuum source (-150 cmH2O) at the trachea. Vmax was consistently higher than the peak oscillatory flow rate (Vosc) during HFO, demonstrating that overall expiratory flow limitation did not cause LHI in isolated dog lungs. Asymmetry of inspiratory and expiratory impedances seems to be one cause of LHI, although other factors are involved.  相似文献   

12.
Adenosine 5'-monophosphate (AMP) and methacholine are commonly used to assess airway hyperreactivity. However, it is not fully known whether the site of airway constriction primarily involved during challenges with either agent is similar. Using a ventilation distribution test, we investigated whether the constriction induced by each agent involves the lung periphery in a similar fashion. Ventilation distribution was evaluated by the phase III slope (S) of the single-breath washout, using gases with different diffusivities like helium (He) and hexafluorosulfur (SF(6)). A greater postchallenge increase in S(He) reflects alterations at the level of terminal and respiratory bronchioles, while a greater increase in S(SF6) reflects alterations in alveolar ducts, increases to an equal extent reflecting alterations in more proximal airways where gas transport is still convective for both gases. S(SF6) and S(He) were measured in 15 asthma patients before and after airway challenges (20% forced expired volume in 1-s fall) with AMP and methacholine. S(He) increased to a greater extent than S(SF6) after AMP challenge (5.7 vs. 3.7%/l; P = 0.002), with both slopes increasing to an equal extent after methacholine challenge (3.1%/l; P = 0.959). The larger increase in S(He) following AMP challenge suggests distal ventilation impairment up to the level of terminal and respiratory bronchioles. With methacholine, the similar increases in S(He) and S(SF6) suggest a less distal impairment. AMP, therefore, seems to affect more extensively the very peripheral airways, whereas methacholine seems to have an effect on less distal airways.  相似文献   

13.
Twelve stable adult asthmatics slowly inhaled boluses of He at 20, 40, or 60% vital capacity (VC); these volumes were achieved either by expiring from total lung capacity (TLC) or by inspiring from residual volume (RV). Inspirations were continued to TLC and then were followed by slow expirations to RV while expired He was measured as a function of expired volume. At 20% VC slopes of alveolar plateaus (phase III) were positive, at 40% VC they were flat, and at 60% VC they were negative; at 20 and 60% VC the slopes were steeper than those in normals. When boluses were administered at 40 and 60% VC, He washout curves were independent of lung volume history. However at 20% VC the slope of phase III was significantly less positive when boluses were given after inspiration from RV than after expiration from TLC. In eight subjects, who were given inhaled beta-agonists, slopes of all He washouts decreased and became independent of volume history at 20% VC. We conclude that in asthmatics at low lung volumes the airways that determine ventilation distribution behave as though they have less hysteresis than the lung parenchyma probably due to increased airway tone.  相似文献   

14.
Mean airway pressure underestimates mean alveolar pressure during high-frequency oscillatory ventilation. We hypothesized that high inspiratory flows characteristic of high-frequency jet ventilation may generate greater inspiratory than expiratory pressure losses in the airways, thereby causing mean airway pressure to overestimate, rather than underestimate, mean alveolar pressure. To test this hypothesis, we ventilated anesthetized paralyzed rabbits with a jet ventilator at frequencies of 5, 10, and 15 Hz, constant inspiratory-to-expiratory time ratio of 0.5 and mean airway pressures of 5 and 10 cmH2O. We measured mean total airway pressure in the trachea with a modified Pitot probe, and we estimated mean alveolar pressure as the mean pressure corresponding in the static pressure-volume relationship to the mean volume of the respiratory system measured with a jacket plethysmograph. We found that mean airway pressure was similar to mean alveolar pressure at frequencies of 5 and 10 Hz but overestimated it by 1.1 and 1.4 cmH2O at mean airway pressures of 5 and 10 cmH2O, respectively, when frequency was increased to 15 Hz. We attribute this finding primarily to the combined effect of nonlinear pressure frictional losses in the airways and higher inspiratory than expiratory flows. Despite the nonlinearity of the pressure-flow relationship, inspiratory and expiratory net pressure losses decreased with respect to mean inspiratory and expiratory flows at the higher rates, suggesting rate dependence of flow distribution. Redistribution of tidal volume to a shunt airway compliance is thought to occur at high frequencies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Pressure drops across the upper (larynx) and central airways of a human lung cast were measured at steady state inspiratory and expiratory flows. Air, HeO2 and SF6-O1 gas mixtures were used at tracheal Reynolds' numbers ranging from 145 to 30 000. The pressure-flow characteristics of the model were analysed using standard pressure-flow diagrams and Moody plots. We found that the asymmetry between inspiratory and expiratory resistances, observed in the central airways (larynx excluded), was markedly reduced in the presence of the larynx. However, static pressure differences were greater across the entire model of the upper and central airways than across the model of the five generations of the tracheo-bronchial tree (without larynx) at the same flow-rates. In addition, our results showed that the presence of the larynx tended to reduce the zone of fully developed laminar flow in the Moody diagram with the higher density gas, while extending the zone of turbulent flow even for the low density gas at low Reynold's numbers.  相似文献   

16.
We determined how close highly trained athletes [n = 8; maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max) = 73 +/- 1 ml.kg-1.min-1] came to their mechanical limits for generating expiratory airflow and inspiratory pleural pressure during maximal short-term exercise. Mechanical limits to expiratory flow were assessed at rest by measuring, over a range of lung volumes, the pleural pressures beyond which no further increases in flow rate are observed (Pmaxe). The capacity to generate inspiratory pressure (Pcapi) was also measured at rest over a range of lung volumes and flow rates. During progressive exercise, tidal pleural pressure-volume loops were measured and plotted relative to Pmaxe and Pcapi at the measured end-expiratory lung volume. During maximal exercise, expiratory flow limitation was reached over 27-76% of tidal volume, peak tidal inspiratory pressure reached an average of 89% of Pcapi, and end-inspiratory lung volume averaged 86% of total lung capacity. Mechanical limits to ventilation (VE) were generally reached coincident with the achievement of VO2max; the greater the ventilatory response, the greater was the degree of mechanical limitation. Mean arterial blood gases measured during maximal exercise showed a moderate hyperventilation (arterial PCO2 = 35.8 Torr, alveolar PO2 = 110 Torr), a widened alveolar-to-arterial gas pressure difference (32 Torr), and variable degrees of hypoxemia (arterial PO2 = 78 Torr, range 65-83 Torr). Increasing the stimulus to breathe during maximal exercise by inducing either hypercapnia (end-tidal PCO2 = 65 Torr) or hypoxemia (saturation = 75%) failed to increase VE, inspiratory pressure, or expiratory pressure. We conclude that during maximal exercise, highly trained individuals often reach the mechanical limits of the lung and respiratory muscle for producing alveolar ventilation. This level of ventilation is achieved at a considerable metabolic cost but with a mechanically optimal pattern of breathing and respiratory muscle recruitment and without sacrifice of a significant alveolar hyperventilation.  相似文献   

17.
Influence of airway resistance on hypoxia-induced periodic breathing.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We studied the effects of changing upper airway pressure on the variability of the dynamic response of ventilation to a hypoxic disturbance in 11 spontaneously breathing dogs. Supralaryngeal pressure, instantaneous inspiratory flow, end-expiratory lung volume, and the inspiratory and expiratory O2 and CO2 concentrations were continuously recorded at baseline and after a 1.5-min hypoxic stimulus (abrupt normoxic recovery). Arterial blood gases were obtained at baseline, at the end of the hypoxic period, and after 1 min of recovery. Airway resistances were modified during the recovery by changing the composition of the inspired gas (all with an inspiratory O2 fraction of 20.9%) among four different trials: two trials were realized with air (density 1.12 g/l), and the other two were with He or SF6 (respective density 0.42 and 4.20) in random order. There was no difference between baseline minute ventilation, arterial blood gases, and supralaryngeal resistance values preceding the trials. The hypoxemic and hypocapnic levels and the hypoxia-induced hyperventilation reached during the hypoxic tests were identical for the different hypoxic stimuli. The supralaryngeal resistance measured at peak flow was dramatically influenced by the composition of the inspired gas: 8.8 +/- 1.8 and 6.9 +/- 1.7 (SE) cmH2O.l-1.s with air, 7.2 +/- 2.2 with He, 21.9 +/- 5.5 with SF6 (P less than 0.05). Ventilatory fluctuations were consistently seen during the posthypoxic period. They were characterized by a strength index value (M) (Waggener et al. J. Appl. Physiol. 56: 576-581, 1984).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The influence of inspiratory and expiratory flow magnitude, lung volume, and lung volume history on respiratory system properties was studied by measuring transfer impedances (4-30 Hz) in seven normal subjects during various constant flow maneuvers. The measured impedances were analyzed with a six-coefficient model including airway resistance (Raw) and inertance (Iaw), tissue resistance (Rti), inertance (Iti), and compliance (Cti), and alveolar gas compressibility. Increasing respiratory flow from 0.1 to 0.4 1/s was found to increase inspiratory and expiratory Raw by 63% and 32%, respectively, and to decrease Iaw, but did not change tissue properties. Raw, Iti, and Cti were larger and Rti was lower during expiration than during inspiration. Decreasing lung volume from 70 to 30% of vital capacity increased Raw by 80%. Cti was larger at functional residual capacity than at the volume extremes. Preceding the measurement by a full expiration rather than by a full inspiration increased Iaw by 15%. The data suggest that the determinants of Raw and Iaw are not identical, that airway hysteresis is larger than lung hysteresis, and that respiratory muscle activity influences tissue properties.  相似文献   

19.
A model of the pulmonary airways was used to study three single-breath indices of gas mixing, dead space (VD), slope of the alveolar plateau, and alveolar mixing inefficiency (AMI). In the model, discrete elements of airway volume were represented by nodes. Using a finite difference technique the differential equation for simultaneous convection and diffusion was solved for the nodal network. Conducting airways and respiratory bronchioles were modeled symmetrically, but alveolar ducts asymmetrically, permitting interaction between convection and diffusion. VD, alveolar slope, and AMI increased with increasing flow. Similar trends were seen with inspired volume, although slope decreased at high inspired volumes with constant flow. VD was affected most by inspiratory flow and AMI and alveolar slope by expiratory time. VD fell approximately exponentially with time of breath holding. Eight different breathing patterns were compared. They had a small effect on alveolar slope and AMI and a greater effect on VD. The model shows how series and parallel inhomogeneity occur together and interact in asymmetrical systems: the old argument as to which is the more important should be abandoned.  相似文献   

20.
Multiple-breath washout (MBW) tests, with end-expiratory lung volume at functional residual capacity (FRC) and 90% O(2), 5% He, and 5% SF(6) as an inspired gas mixture, were performed in healthy volunteers in supine and prone postures. The semilog plot of MBW N(2) concentrations was evaluated in terms of its curvilinearity. The MBW N(2) normalized slope analysis yielded indexes of acinar and conductive ventilation heterogeneity (Verbanck S, Schuermans D, Van Muylem A, Paiva M, Noppen M, and Vincken W. J App Physiol 83: 1907-1916, 1997). Also, the difference between SF(6) and He normalized phase III slopes was computed in the first MBW expiration. Only MBW tests with similar FRC in the prone and supine postures (P > 0.1; n = 8) were considered. Prone and supine postures did not reveal any significant differences in curvilinearity, N(2) normalized slope-derived indexes of conductive or acinar ventilation heterogeneity, nor SF(6)-He normalized phase III slope difference in the first MBW expiration (P > 0.1 for all). The absence of significant changes in any of the MBW indexes suggests that ventilation heterogeneity is similar in the supine and prone postures of normal subjects breathing near FRC.  相似文献   

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