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1.
To investigate the effects of airway cartilage softening on tracheal mechanics, pressure-volume (PV) curves of excised tracheas were studied in 12 rabbits treated with 100 mg/kg iv papain, whereas 14 control animals received no pretreatment. The animals were killed 24 h after the injection and the excised specimens studied 24 h later. Treated tracheas exhibited decreased ability to withstand negative transmural pressures, reflected in increased collapse compliance: 6.2 +/- 2.1 vs. 2.0 +/- 0.5% peak volume (Vmax)/cmH2O means +/- SD, P less than 0.001, (Vmax = extrapolated maximal tracheal volume), increased kc (exponential constant that reflects the shape of collapse limb of the PV curve): 0.244 +/- 0.077 vs. 0.065 +/- 0.015 (P less than 0.001). The distension limb of the PV curve greater than 2.5 cmH2O transmural pressure (Ptm) was no different. Compliance between 0 and 2.5 cmH2O Ptm was increased in papain-treated rabbits: 4.97 +/- 1.73 vs. 2.30 +/- 0.31% Vmax/cmH2O (P less than 0.001). Tracheal volume, and therefore mean diameter, was decreased at 0 Ptm: 2.7 +/- 0.26 vs. 3.2 +/- 0.27 mm (P less than 0.001). We conclude that airway cartilage softening increases the compliance of the trachea at pressures less than 2.5 cmH2O Ptm.  相似文献   

2.
To study the interaction between tracheal cartilage and the trachealis muscle we measured trachealis muscle contraction in response to electrical field stimulation and methacholine in excised tracheal segments from control and papain-treated rabbits. Papain treatment softened the tracheal cartilage and altered the passive pressure volume curve of the tracheal segments at transmural pressures below 5 cmH2O. The transmural pressure required for maximal active changes in volume (isobaric contraction) with electrical field stimulation was increased in papain-treated animals. We conclude that tracheal cartilage provides a preload which stretches the trachealis muscle toward optimal length and that papain, by altering the elastic mechanical properties of cartilage, decreases this preload.  相似文献   

3.
Insights into airway mechanics were sought by applying morphometric techniques to rabbit lungs fixed at several lung recoil pressures. Rabbits were treated with either nebulized carbachol followed by iv administration of carbachol or with saline solution (sham). The lungs were held at one of six values of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP; 10, 7, 4, 2, 0, and -4 cmH(2)O) while the animal was killed and formalin was circulated through the lungs. The lungs were removed and left in a bath of formalin for 24 h. Standard airway morphometric measurements were made on membranous bronchiole slices taken from representative blocks of tissue. Reductions in PEEP produced the expected reductions in lumen area in the carbachol-treated airways but not in the sham-treated airways for PEEP > 2 cmH(2)O. Sham-treated airways remained more open than expected until they collapsed into an oval shape at PEEPs between 4 and 2 cmH(2)O. The carbachol-treated airways exhibited this behavior at PEEP = -4 cmH(2)O. The smallest airways, which had relatively thicker walls, collapsed less than larger airways. We postulate that this behavior implies that peribronchial stress is greater than lumen pressure on collapse into the oval shape. Resistance to buckling increases with the thickness-to-radius ratio of the airway wall, which explains why the smallest airways are the most open. The development of epithelial folds appeared to follow the theoretical prediction of a previous study (Lambert RK, Codd SL, Alley MR, and Pack RJ. J Appl Physiol 77: 1206-1216, 1994).  相似文献   

4.
Pressure-area behavior of the excised trachea is well documented, but little is known of tracheal compliance in vivo. Extratracheal tissue pressures are not directly measurable, but transmural pressure for the intrathoracic trachea is inferred from intra-airway and pleural pressure differences. Extramural pressure of the cervical trachea is assumed to be atmospheric. The difference in transmural pressure between the intra- and extrathoracic tracheal segments should be exaggerated during Mueller and Valsalva maneuvers. We used the acoustic reflection technique to measure tracheal areas above and below the thoracic inlet during these isovolume-pressure maneuvers. We found that 10 cmH2O positive pressure increased tracheal area in the extrathoracic segment by 34 +/- 16% (mean +/- SD) and in the intrathoracic segment by 35 +/- 15%. There was a reduction in area of 27 +/- 16 and 24 +/- 14%, respectively, for the extra- and intrathoracic segments with 10 cmH2O negative pressure. We conclude that the effective transmural pressure gradients do not vary significantly between intra- and extrathoracic tracheal segments.  相似文献   

5.
Isolated tracheal segments were studied in vitro to determine how inflation affects the length and tension of the contracted and relaxed trachealis muscle. Circumferential trachealis muscle lengths were measured from cross-sectional radiographs taken during stepwise inflation of intact 20-cm-long tracheal segments to an inflation pressure of 25 cmH2O. A tracheal length spanning two cartilage rings was then cut out and mounted in a tissue bath using clips attached at the points of muscle insertion into the cartilage. The ring was stretched open along the axis of the muscle, and the resulting forces of the relaxed and contracted muscle and the cartilage were measured. Muscle lengths and tensions during inflation of the trachea were determined by comparing pressure vs. length and force vs. length measurements. During inflation from 0 to 25 cmH2O, the circumferential length of the trachealis muscle contracted with 10(-5) M acetylcholine increased from 48 to 70% of its length of maximal active tension (Lmax), while the relaxed muscle increased from 80 to 93% Lmax. The length of the contracted muscle was maintained at a nearly constant proportion of its relaxed length at each pressure.  相似文献   

6.
The compliant airways of the premature neonate undergo episodic distention and collapse in response to changes in transmural pressure such as occur during spontaneous breathing, mechanical ventilation, and various therapeutic maneuvers. To identify and quantitate the effects of distending and collapsing transmural pressures on the structure of immature airways, tracheal segments from fetal rabbits, fixed at 0, +30, and -30 cm H2O transmural pressure, were examined using histologic and morphometric techniques. In comparison to control sections fixed at 0 cm H2O transmural pressure, application of distending pressures led to evagination of the posterior tracheal wall and significantly increased (P less than 0.05) cross-sectional area, antero-posterior diameter, circumference and muscle length, and decreased muscle thickness. Collapsed tracheal segments (-30 cm H2O) demonstrated invagination of the posterior wall and significantly (P less than 0.05) lower cross-sectional area, and antero-posterior diameter compared to the control segments; all the other parameters remained relatively unchanged. These data demonstrate extreme changes in tracheal geometry in response to the acute application of transmural pressure. From a methodological perspective, these observations suggest that fixation pressures may present significant artifact in histological analyses. Functionally, the noted deformation may lead to alterations in anatomic dead space and airway resistance, and mechanical function of the airways; all of which may compromise respiratory status in ventilated premature infant.  相似文献   

7.
Analysis of tracheal mechanics and applications.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have developed a mathematical model for a tracheal ring that consists of a "horseshoe" of cartilage with its tips joined by a membrane. The ring is subjected to a uniform transmural pressure (Ptm) difference. The model was used to calculate the cross-sectional area (A) of the trachea. Whereas the mechanics of the deformation of the cartilage were analyzed using elastica theory, the posterior membrane was treated as a simple membrane that is inextensible under changes in Ptm. The membrane can be specified to be of any length less than baseline and thus can represent a posterior membrane under tension. The cartilage can have specifiable nonuniform unstressed curvature as well as nonuniform bending stiffness. We have investigated the effect on the tracheal A-Ptm curve of posterior membrane length and tensile force in the membrane, cartilage shape and elasticity, and localized weakening of the cartilage. The model predictions are in good agreement with magnetic resonance imaging data from rabbit tracheas and show that the shape of the horseshoe as well as the posterior membrane force are important determinants of tracheal compliance.  相似文献   

8.
Isovolumetric and isobaric tracheal smooth muscle (TSM) contraction were studied in vitro in a preparation of the whole rabbit trachea. Eight tracheae from New Zealand White rabbits were excised and mounted at a fixed length in an organ bath. Electrical field stimulation (EFS) was performed in isovolumetric and isobaric conditions at varying transmural pressures (TMP). Supramaximal stimulation with methacholine was done at 0 TMP. Active change in pressure (delta P) with EFS showed a peak at 3.1 +/- 1.06 cmH2O TMP during inflation and at 4.1 +/- 1.18 cmH2O TMP during deflation (mean +/- SE). Active delta P decreased at higher or lower TMP. Active change in volume with EFS showed a peak at 3.2 +/- 1.26 cmH2O TMP during inflation and at 1.8 +/- 0.98 cmH2O TMP during deflation. A decrease in response was also observed at higher and lower TMP. From these data, we concluded that TSM is at optimal length (Lmax) at TMP of 2-3 cmH2O. Maximal TSM shortening with supramaximal stimulation with methacholine was 32% Lmax. This figure is considerably smaller than the 80% shortening found in unloaded strips of TSM. We conclude that rabbit TSM length is close to Lmax at TMP similar to those found at functional residual capacity and that the loads that the muscle has to overcome probably contribute to the limited shortening observed in situ.  相似文献   

9.
Using our transistor model of the lung during forced expiration (J. Appl. Physiol. 62: 2013-2025, 1987), we recently predicted that 1) axially arranged choke points can exist simultaneously during forced expiration with sufficient effort, and 2) overall maximal expiratory flow may be relatively insensitive to nonuniform airways obstruction because of flow interdependence between parallel upstream branches. We tested these hypotheses in excised central airways obtained from five canine lungs. Steady expiratory flow was induced by supplying constant upstream pressure (Pupstream = 0-16 cmH2O) to the bronchi of both lungs while lowering pressure at the tracheal airway opening (16 to -140 cmH2O). Intra-airway pressure profiles obtained during steady maximal expiratory flow disclosed a single choke point in the midtrachea when Pupstream was high (2-16 cmH2O). However, when Pupstream was low (0 cmH2O), two choke sites were evident: the tracheal site persisted, but another upstream choke point (main carina or both main bronchi) was added. Flow interdependence was studied by comparing maximal expiratory flow through each lung before and after introduction of a unilateral external resistance upstream of the bronchi of one lung. When this unilateral resistance was added, ipsilateral flow always fell, but changes in flow through the contralateral lung depended on the site of the most upstream choke. When a single choke existed in the trachea, addition of the external resistance increased contralateral flow by 38 +/- 28% (SD, P less than 0.003). In contrast, when the most upstream choke existed at the main carina or in the bronchi, addition of the external resistance had no effect on contralateral maximal expiratory flow.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The static mechanical properties of the passive pharynx were investigated in Vietnamese pot-bellied pigs by using an isolated upper airway preparation. During general anesthesia and neuromuscular blockade, cross-sectional area (A) of the pharynx was measured while airway pressure (Paw) was held at various pressures in the absence of airflow. The static A-Paw relationship was measured during application of 0, 1, and 2 cm of caudal tracheal displacement. Relative to humans, closing pressures (Pclose) of the pig pharynx were very low (-15 to -35 cmH(2)O). Tracheal displacement significantly decreased compliance of the hypopharynx (from 0.074 +/- 0.02 cm(2)/cmH(2)O with no displacement to 0.052 +/- 0.01 cm(2)/cmH(2)O with 2 cm of displacement) and decreased Pclose of the oropharynx (from -18.2 +/- 9.9 cmH(2)O to -24.1 +/- 10.5 and -28.7 +/- 12.3 cmH(2)O with 1 and 2 cm of displacement, respectively). Tracheal displacement did not affect A of the pharyngeal segments. In conclusion, tracheal displacement decreased collapsibility of the passive pharynx. The pharynx of the pot-bellied pig is structurally more resistant to collapse than the human pharynx.  相似文献   

11.
Stress adaptation and low-frequency impedance of rat lungs   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
At transpulmonary pressures (Ptp) of 7-12 cmH2O, pressure-volume hysteresis of isolated cat lungs has been found to be 20-50% larger than predicted from their amount of stress adaptation (J. Hildebrandt, J. Appl. Physiol. 28: 365-372, 1970). This behavior is inconsistent with linear viscoelasticity and has been interpreted in terms of plastoelasticity. We have reinvestigated this phenomenon in isolated lungs from 12 Wistar rats by measuring 1) the changes in Ptp after 0.5-ml step volume changes (initial Ptp of 5 cmH2O) and 2) their response to sinusoidal pressure forcing from 0.01 to 0.67 Hz (2 cmH2O peak to peak, mean Ptp of 6 cmH2O). Stress adaptation curves were found to fit approximately Hildebrandt's logarithmic model [delta Ptp/delta V = A - B.log(t)] from 0.2 to 100 s, where delta V is the step volume change, A and B are coefficients, and t is time. A and B averaged 1.06 +/- 0.11 and 0.173 +/- 0.019 cmH2O/ml, respectively, with minor differences between stress relaxation and stress recovery curves. The response to sinusoidal forcing was characterized by the effective resistance (Re) and elastance (EL). Re decreased from 2.48 +/- 0.41 cmH2O.ml-1.s at 0.01 Hz to 0.18 +/- 0.03 cmH2O.ml-1.s at 0.5 Hz, and EL increased from 0.99 +/- 0.10 to 1.26 +/- 0.20 cmH2O/ml on the same frequency range. These data were analyzed with the frequency-domain version of the same model, complemented by a Newtonian resistance (R) to account for airway resistance: Re = R + B/ (9.2f) and EL = A + 0.25B + B . log 2 pi f, where f is the frequency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Flow (V), volume (V), and tracheal pressure (Ptr) were measured throughout a series of brief (100 ms) interruptions of expiratory V in six patients during anesthesia (halothane-N2O) and anesthesia-paralysis (succinylcholine). For the latter part of spontaneous expiration and throughout passive deflation during muscle paralysis, a plateau in postinterruption Ptr was observed, indicating respiratory muscle relaxation. Under these conditions, passive elastance of the total respiratory system (Ers) was determined as the plateau in postinterruption Ptr divided by the corresponding V. The pressure-flow relationship of the total system was determined by plotting the plateau in Ptr during interruption against the immediately preceding V. Ers averaged 23.5 +/- 1.9 (SD) cmH2O X l-1 during anesthesia and 25.5 +/- 5.4 cmH2O X l-1 during anesthesia-paralysis. Corresponding values of total respiratory system resistance were 2.0 +/- 0.8 and 1.9 +/- 0.6 cmH2O X l-1 X s, respectively. Respiratory mechanics determined during anesthesia paralysis using the single-breath method (W.A. Zin, L. D. Pengelly, and J. Milic-Emili, J. Appl. Physiol. 52: 1266-1271, 1982) were also similar. Early in spontaneous expiration, however, Ptr increased progressively during the period of interruption, reflecting the presence of gradually decreasing antagonistic (postinspiratory) pressure of the inspiratory muscles. In conclusion, the interrupter technique allows for simultaneous determination of the passive elastic as well as flow-resistive properties of the total respiratory system. The presence of a plateau in postinterruption Ptr may be employed as a useful and simple criterion to confirm the presence of respiratory muscle relaxation.  相似文献   

13.
The bronchial mucosa contributes to elastic properties of the airway wall and may influence the degree of airway expansion during lung inflation. In the deflated lung, folds in the epithelium and associated basement membrane progressively unfold on inflation. Whether the epithelium and basement membrane also distend on lung inflation at physiological pressures is uncertain. We assessed mucosal distensibility from strain-stress curves in mucosal strips and related this to epithelial length and folding. Mucosal strips were prepared from pig bronchi and cycled stepwise from a strain of 0 (their in situ length at 0 transmural pressure) to a strain of 0.5 (50% increase in length). Mucosal stress and epithelial length in situ were calculated from morphometric data in bronchial segments fixed at 5 and 25 cmH(2)O luminal pressure. Mucosal strips showed nonlinear strain-stress properties, but regions at high and low stress were close to linear. Stresses calculated in bronchial segments at 5 and 25 cmH(2)O fell in the low-stress region of the strain-stress curve. The epithelium of mucosal strips was deeply folded at low strains (0-0.15), which in bronchial segments equated to < or =10 cmH(2)O transmural pressure. Morphometric measurements in mucosal strips at greater strains (0.3-0.4) indicated that epithelial length increased by approximately 10%. Measurements in bronchial segments indicated that epithelial length increased approximately 25% between 5 and 25 cmH(2)O. Our findings suggest that, at airway pressures <10 cmH(2)O, airway expansion is due primarily to epithelial unfolding but at higher pressures the epithelium also distends.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of this study was to determine the neural output of pulmonary stretch receptors (PSRs) in response to conditions that, in previous studies (J. Appl. Physiol. 65: 179-186, 1988 and Respir. Physiol. 80: 307-322, 1990), produced apnea in anesthetized cats. These conditions included changes in airway pressure (Paw; 2 or 6 cmH2O), stroke or tidal volume (1-4 ml/kg), frequency [conventional mechanical ventilation (CMV) vs. high-frequency ventilation (HFV) at 10, 15, and 20 Hz], and levels of inspired CO2 (0, 2, and 5%). These data were needed to assess properly the specific contribution of the PSRs to the apnea found with certain combinations of the above variables. Each PSR was subjected to HFV over a range of mechanical and chemical settings, and its activity was recorded. PSRs exhibited continuous activity associated with pump stroke in 11 of 12 fibers tested. PSRs fired more rapidly when mean Paw was 6 cmH2O [45.3 +/- 0.8 (SE) impulses/s] than when it was 2 cmH2O (31.7 +/- 0.9 impulses/s, P = 0.0001). At both pressures, PSR activity increased as the volume of inflation, or tidal volume, was increased from 1 to 4 ml/kg. At Paw of 2 cmH2O, the number of impulses per second for HFV was not different from that for CMV (averaged over the respiratory cycle), under conditions previously demonstrated as apneogenic for both modes of ventilation. Therefore the absolute amount of information being sent to the brain stem processing centers via PSRs during HFV did not differ from that during CMV. Thus any PSR contribution to HFV-induced apnea must have been the result of changes in the pattern of the signal or the central nervous system's processing of it rather than an increase in the amount of inhibitory afferent signal.  相似文献   

15.
The isobaric and isovolumetric properties of intrapulmonary arteries were evaluated by placing a highly compliant balloon inside arterial segments. The passive pressure-volume (P-V) curve was obtained by changing volume (0.004 ml/s) and measuring pressure. The isobaric active volume change (delta V) or isovolumetric active pressure change (delta P) generated by submaximal histamine was measured at four different transmural pressures (Ptm's) reached by balloon inflation. The maximal delta P = 11.2 +/- 0.6 cmH2O (mean +/- SE) was achieved at 30.8 +/- 1.2 cmH2O Ptm and maximal delta V = 0.20 +/- 0.02 ml at 16.7 +/- 1.7 cmH2O Ptm. The P-V relationships were similar when volume was increased after either isobaric or isovolumetric contraction. The calculated length-tension (L-T) relationship showed that the active tension curve was relatively flat and that the passive tension at the optimal length was 149 +/- 11% of maximal active tension. These data show that 1) a large elastic component operates in parallel with the smooth muscle in intralobar pulmonary arteries, and 2) the change in resistance associated with vascular expansion of the proximal arteries is independent of the type of contraction that occurs in the more distal arterial segments.  相似文献   

16.
A finite-element model of tracheal collapse   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The trachea has been approximated by an appropriate finite-element model. The three-dimensional equilibrium problems set by the tracheal deformation under various stresses have been solved using a convenient augmented Lagrangian functional. The dimensions were obtained from human tracheae. Mechanical constants for the anatomic components were calculated from the stress-strain relationships. The compressive narrowing is essentially due to the invagination of the posterior membrane in the tracheal lumen for transmural pressures down to -7 kPa. A surface of contact between the membranous wall and the lateral walls appears when the transmural pressure equals -6 kPa. The transmural pressure-area relationship is sigmoidal with a compliance equal to 0.08 kPa-1 for a transmural pressure of -2 kPa. The tracheal collapse is greater when the material constants of the membranous wall decrease or when the tracheal segment is subjected to a longitudinal tension. A slight flexion of the trachea induces an asymmetric deformation.  相似文献   

17.
The pulmonary capillaries of neonatal lungs are potentially vulnerable to stress failure because of the complex changes in the pulmonary circulation that occur at birth. We perfusion fixed the lungs from nine anesthetized newborn rabbits at capillary transmural pressures (P(tm)) of 5 +/- 5, 10 +/- 5, and 15 +/- 5 cmH(2)O. Normal microscopic appearances were seen at P(tm) values of 5 +/- 5 and 10 +/- 5 cmH(2)O, but massive airway edema was observed in lungs perfused at a P(tm) of 15 +/- 5 cmH(2)O. Consistent with this, no disruptions of the alveolar epithelium were observed at P(tm) values of 5 +/- 5 cmH(2)O, but mean values of 0.11 and 1.22 breaks/mm epithelium were found at P(tm) of 10 +/- 5 and 15 +/- 5 cmH(2)O, respectively (P < 0.05 for 5 +/- 5 vs. 15 +/- 5 cmH(2)O). These pressures are in striking contrast to those in the adult rabbit in which, by a similar procedure, a P(tm) of 52.5 cmH(2)O, is required before stress failure is consistently seen. We conclude that stress failure of pulmonary capillaries in newborn rabbit lungs can occur at P(tm) values of less than one-third of those that are required in adult lungs.  相似文献   

18.
Inspiratory muscle activity increases when lung volume is increased by continuous positive-pressure breathing in conscious human subjects (Green et al., Respir. Physiol. 35: 283-300, 1978). Because end-tidal CO2 pressure (PETCO2) does not change, these increases have not been attributed to chemoreflexes. However, continuous positive-pressure breathing at 20 cmH2O influences the end-tidal to arterial CO2 pressure differences (Folkow and Pappenheimer, J. Appl. Physiol. 8: 102-110, 1955). We have compared PETCO2 with arterial CO2 pressure (PaCO2). We have compared PETCO2 with arterial CO2 pressure (PaCO2) in healthy human subjects exposed to continuous positive airway pressure (10 cmH2O) or continuous negative pressure around the torso (-15 cmH2O) sufficient to increase mean lung volume by about 650 ml. The difference between PETCO2 and PaCO2 was not decreased, and we conclude that PETCO2 is a valid measure of chemical drive to ventilation in such circumstances. We observed substantial increases in respiratory muscle electromyograms during pressure breathing as seen previously and conclude this response must originate by proprioception. On average, the compensation of tidal volume thus afforded was complete, but the wide variability of individual responses suggests that there was a large cerebral cortical component in the responses seen here.  相似文献   

19.
Matched porcine tracheal rings were exposed to theophylline and increasing doses of carbachol in Krebs solution. Histological sections of each ring were traced and each of the following dimensions measured: the external perimeter (Pe) and external area (Ae) defined by the outer border of smooth muscle and inner surface of cartilage, and the internal perimeter (Pi) and internal area (Ai) defined by the luminal surface of the epithelium and the muscle length (L) along its outer border. Absolute wall area (WA = Ae - Ai) and relative wall area (PW = WA/Ae) were calculated. Carbachol-treated tracheal ring dimensions were compared with those of their matched theophylline-treated rings. In tracheal rings with intact cartilage, maximal smooth muscle shortening of 44% was achieved with 10(-2) M carbachol. In tracheal rings in which anterior and posterior segments of cartilage were excised, the trachealis muscle passively shortened by 20% and maximal shortening (10(-3) M carbachol) was 57%. Although Ai decreased with maximal smooth muscle shortening, there were no changes in the length of Pi or in WA. These data show that the cartilage in the porcine trachea exerts both a preload that passively stretches the trachealis muscle and an afterload that limits maximal smooth muscle shortening.  相似文献   

20.
Repeated aerosol antigen challenge of previously sensitized guinea pigs induces airway hyperresponsiveness to inhaled acetylcholine. To determine the mechanism producing these airway changes and assuming that changes in the trachealis muscle reflect changes in muscle of the entire tracheobronchial tree, we examined the in vitro smooth muscle mechanics and morphometric parameters of tracheae from guinea pigs demonstrating hyperresponsiveness in vivo vs. tracheae from control guinea pigs. No differences between these groups were found in luminal volume at zero transmural pressure, passive pressure-volume characteristics, or area of airway wall. Smooth muscle areas were slightly less in tracheae from hyperresponsive guinea pigs. Tracheae from hyperresponsive guinea pigs had both significantly increased isovolumetric force generation and isobaric shortening compared with tracheae from controls when evaluated over the range of transmural pressures from -40 to 40 cmH2O. We conclude that the in vivo airway hyperresponsiveness induced with repeated antigen challenge is associated with both increased force generation and shortening of tracheal smooth muscle without increased muscle mass, suggesting enhanced contractile activity.  相似文献   

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