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1.
The existence of a major gravity-independent gradient of blood flow in lungs has recently been described based on single photon emission computed tomography after intravenous injection of radioactively labeled macroaggregates. We wanted to test this hypothesis of a major gravity-independent gradient in lung blood flow in experiments with direct measurement of macroaggregate distribution in the dog lung. In six anesthetized (4 prone spontaneously breathing, 2 mechanically ventilated) dogs we injected 111In-labeled albumin macroaggregates intravenously. We killed the dogs, removed, inflated, and froze the lower lobes. We sliced the lobes 1 cm thick and made gamma camera images of the slices. We then cut three or four slices in each lobe into two or three concentric layers and measured the radioactivity per gram of tissue in a well-type gamma counter. In three of the dogs we also labeled the red cells (99mTc) so that blood volume in each sample could be determined. The gamma camera images were acquired on a 64 X 64 matrix with 4 X 4 mm pixels. On the numeric printouts from the individual slices we made two or three concentric layers and calculated activity per pixel in each layer. Neither by the well counting nor by the pixel analysis of the gamma scans did we detect any gravity-independent distribution of blood flow. With the well counting the distribution was the same whether macroaggregate activity was expressed per gram of tissue or per gram of blood-free tissue. We conclude that by direct measurements no major gravity-independent gradient of pulmonary blood flow can be detected in dog lungs.  相似文献   

2.
Effect of body posture on spatial distribution of pulmonary blood flow   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Single-photon emission-computed tomography (SPECT) on intact dogs and humans suggests that one aspect of regional blood flow in the lung (Qr) is independent of gravity, e.g., the gradient in Qr between the core and the periphery. To further evaluate these findings, six anesthetized healthy dogs (approximately 30 kg), two in the supine posture, two in the prone posture, and two suspended in the upright posture, breathing spontaneously, were injected (iv) at end expiration with 20 mCi99mTc-labeled albumin macroaggregates. The animals were killed, their chests were opened, their lungs were removed and dissected free of other tissue, and the blood was drained. The lungs were dried by blowing warm air (50 degrees C) while they were inflated to full capacity for about 18 h. The fully inflated and dry lungs were placed in the supine position and SPECT was performed to determine the three-dimensional distribution of activity. One hundred and twenty projections of the activity in the entire lungs were obtained at 3 degrees steps with a rotating gamma camera and stored in computer memory. Once SPECT was completed, either a coronal slice or a sagittal slice (1 cm thick) was cut and imaged directly by placing it against the gamma camera collimator for 6 min. The tomographic-reconstructed slices revealed that at isogravity, in all body postures, Qr in the central region of the lungs was up to 10 times that in the periphery. Furthermore, the central-peripheral gradient was discernible within the individual lobes. The direct images of slices also confirmed these findings. Although flow inequalities independent of gravity were present, the central region with the highest flow often was closer to the dependent regions of the lungs, suggesting that gravity had some influence on the final distribution. The results suggest that factors other than gravity also play an important role in the distribution of pulmonary blood flow. These factors may be related to the conductance of the vascular pathways that lead to different regions in the lungs.  相似文献   

3.
Gravity-independent inequality in pulmonary blood flow in humans   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Single-photon emission computerized tomography of the lung with 99mTc-labeled human albumin macroaggregates (99mTc-MAA) was used in six healthy subjects to study the three-dimensional distribution of pulmonary blood flow. 99mTc-MAA was injected while the subjects were resting in the supine position and holding their lung volume at normal end expiration. Tomography was performed on each subject from 120 projections of radioactivity in the lungs acquired with a rotating gamma camera. To minimize lung motion artifacts, the subjects were asked to hold their breath at end expiration during the 10-s duration of data acquisition in each projectional angle. Perfusion images of lung slices (11 mm thick) were reconstructed, and the radioactivity within each slice was expressed per unit lung volume of 3.7 X 3.7 X 11 mm. Perfusion images of a midcoronal slice from each subject manifested a concentric pattern of radioactivity that decreased significantly from the center to the periphery, suggesting that blood flow rate per unit lung volume was up to 10 times larger near the central region. This gradient in activity between the center and the periphery of the coronary slices was gravity independent as the subjects were supine. Images of sagittal slices from the middle of the right lung also manifested a similar pattern of concentric gradient in activity, with the vertical distribution (gravity related) almost comparable with the horizontal distribution (gravity independent). These results indicate that pulmonary blood flow in resting supine humans is spatially stratified with a marked central-to-peripheral gradient in all directions. It appears that zone 4 (reduced blood flow) is not a phenomenon limited to the dependent region of the lung as commonly thought but rather is a manifestation of this spatial distribution whereby blood flow is lowest in all peripheral regions of the lung.  相似文献   

4.
Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) is known to affect regional pulmonary blood flow distribution. It is unknown whether lungs with well-matched ventilation (V)/perfusion (Q) have regional differences in the HPV response. Five prone pigs were anesthetized and mechanically ventilated (positive end-expiratory pressure = 2 cmH2O). Two hypoxic preconditions [inspired oxygen fraction (FI(O2)) = 0.13] were completed to stabilize the animal's hypoxic response. Regional pulmonary blood Q and V distribution was determined at various FI(O2) (0.21, 0.15, 0.13, 0.11, 0.09) using the fluorescent microsphere technique. Q and V in the lungs were quantified within 2-cm3 lung pieces. Pieces were grouped, or clustered, based on the changes in blood flow when subjected to increasing hypoxia. Unique patterns of Q response to hypoxia were seen within and across animals. The three main patterns (clusters) showed little initial difference in V/Q matching at room air where the mean V/Q range was 0.92-1.06. The clusters were spatially located in cranial, central, and caudal portions of the lung. With decreasing FI(O2), blood flow shifted from the cranial to caudal regions. We determined that pulmonary blood flow changes, caused by HPV, produced distinct response patterns that were seen in similar regions across our prone porcine model.  相似文献   

5.
To examine the effect of cardiac output (CO) on the gravity-nondependent distribution of pulmonary blood flow, 2 X 10(6) 99mTc-labeled albumin microspheres (20 microns) were injected at end expiration into dogs (anesthetized, supine, and breathing room air spontaneously). Two animals were injected at their resting CO, two were injected during increased CO (arteriovenous fistulas induced), and two were injected at low CO (phlebotomy induced). The chest was opened and the lungs were removed, drained of blood, and dried while fully inflated. Single-photon emission-computed tomography was performed on the dry lungs to map the distribution of activity in transverse, coronal, and sagittal slices. The results confirmed the presence of a central-peripheral gravity-nondependent gradient and showed that increases in CO were associated with increases in absolute flow to both the central and peripheral regions of the lung with persistence of the central-peripheral gradient. These observations were further confirmed by direct imaging of midcoronal slices. Examination of the average flow in vertical and horizontal slices showed that, when zone 1 was not present, changes in CO affected all slices uniformly, such that when the CO doubled, the absolute flow in every slice in all three planes also doubled. We conclude that, with the exception of recruitment and derecruitment of vascular channels in the upper regions of the lung (zone 1), when CO changes, the blood flow everywhere in the lung changes uniformly and in proportion to the CO. This uniform increase in blood flow is consistent with the three-dimensional nature and resistive properties of the pulmonary vascular tree.  相似文献   

6.
We measured the regional distribution of pulmonary extravascular and interstitial water to examine the possibility that regional differences in microvascular pressure or tissue stress may cause regional differences in lung water. We placed chloralose-anesthetized dogs in an upright (n = 6) or supine (n = 7) position for 180 min. We injected 51Cr-labeled EDTA to equilibrate to the extracellular space and 125I-labeled albumin to equilibrate with plasma. At the end of the experiment, the lungs were removed, passively drained of blood, and inflated before rapid freezing. Lungs were divided into horizontal slices, and extravascular, interstitial, and plasma water, red cell volume, and dry lung weight were determined for each slice. We found that regional extravascular and interstitial water were constant throughout the lungs in both groups and that there were no significant differences between upright and supine dogs. There were no significant differences in hematocrit between slices. We conclude that gravity and body position have no measurable effect on either the total size of the extravascular and interstitial compartments or their regional distribution.  相似文献   

7.
The classic four-zone model of lung blood flow distribution has been questioned. We asked whether the effect of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is different between the prone and supine position for lung tissue in the same zonal condition. Anesthetized and mechanically ventilated prone (n = 6) and supine (n = 5) sheep were studied at 0, 10, and 20 cm H2O PEEP. Perfusion was measured with intravenous infusion of radiolabeled 15-microm microspheres. The right lung was dried at total lung capacity and diced into pieces (approximately 1.5 cm3), keeping track of the spatial location of each piece. Radioactivity per unit weight was determined and normalized to the mean value for each condition and animal. In the supine posture, perfusion to nondependent lung regions decreased with little relative perfusion in nondependent horizontal lung planes at 10 and 20 cm H2O PEEP. In the prone position, the effect of PEEP was markedly different with substantial perfusion remaining in nondependent lung regions and even increasing in these regions with 20 cm H2O PEEP. Vertical blood flow gradients in zone II lung were large in supine, but surprisingly absent in prone, animals. Isogravitational perfusion heterogeneity was smaller in prone than in supine animals at all PEEP levels. Redistribution of pulmonary perfusion by PEEP ventilation in supine was largely as predicted by the zonal model in marked contrast to the findings in prone. The differences between postures in blood flow distribution within zone II strongly indicate that factors in addition to pulmonary arterial, venous, and alveolar pressure play important roles in determining perfusion distribution in the in situ lung. We suggest that regional variation in lung volume through the effect on vascular resistance is one such factor and that chest wall conformation and thoracic contents determine regional lung volume.  相似文献   

8.
Differences in regional vascular conductances in isolated dog lungs   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The distribution of pulmonary blood flow is influenced by gravity, regional lung expansion, and hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. However, these factors cannot completely explain the three-dimensional distribution of blood flow in the lung. The present study was designed to see whether anatomically related factors could contribute. Regional blood pressure vs. flow curves were determined in 100-230 small parenchymal samples (0.3-0.4 ml) from 12 isolated perfused dog lungs held at constant inflation pressure. In each region four blood flows were measured using radioactively labeled microspheres, and the four corresponding regional perfusion pressures were determined by correcting the measured perfusion pressure for hydrostatic effects. There were considerable differences in the slopes of the pressure vs. flow curves among lung regions. Dorso-caudal regions of the lung had higher vascular conductances than ventrocephalad regions, independent of the vertical orientation of the lung or the inflation volume during injections of microspheres. Thus the distributions of regional vascular conductances were related to the anatomic location and were not related to gravity, nor were they caused by nonuniformities in regional lung expansion or by hypoxic vasoconstriction or edema.  相似文献   

9.
The ratios of ventilatory (V) and perfusion (Q) flow rates in the lung are to a large extent responsible for the efficiency of gas exchange. In a simplified monocompartmental model of the lung, the arterial partial pressure of a given gas (Pa) is a function of several factors: the solubility of this gas in blood, its venous and inspired partial pressures and the V/Q ratio. In a multicompartemental model, the mean arterial partial pressure of the gas is a function of the individual values of Pa in each compartment as well as the distribution of V/Q ratios in the lung and the relationship between the concentration and the partial pressure of the gas. The heterogeneity of the distribution of V/Q results from those of both V and Q. Two factors are mainly responsible for this heterogeneity: the gravity and the morphometric characteristics of bronchi and vessels. V/Q ratios are partially controlled at least in low V/Q compartments since hypoxia in these compartments leads to pulmonary arteriolar vasoconstriction. However lungs V/Q ratios range from 0.1 to 10 with a mode around 1. Age, muscular exercise, posture, accelerations, anesthesia, O2 breathing, pulmonary pathology are factors which may alter the distribution of V/Q ratios.  相似文献   

10.
The main purpose of this study was to find out whether the dominant dorsal lung perfusion while supine changes to a dominant ventral lung perfusion while prone. Regional distribution of pulmonary blood flow was determined in 10 healthy volunteers. The subjects were studied in both prone and supine positions with and without lung distension caused by 10 cmH2O of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Radiolabeled macroaggregates of albumin, rapidly trapped by pulmonary capillaries in proportion to blood flow, were injected intravenously. Tomographic gamma camera examinations (single-photon-emission computed tomography) were performed after injections in the different positions. All data acquisitions were made with the subject in the supine position. CPAP enhanced perfusion differences along the gravitational axis, which was more pronounced in the supine than prone position. Diaphragmatic sections of the lung had a more uniform pulmonary blood flow distribution in the prone than supine position during both normal and CPAP breathing. It was concluded that the dominant dorsal lung perfusion observed when the subjects were supine was not changed into a dominant ventral lung perfusion when the subjects were prone. Lung perfusion was more uniformly distributed in the prone compared with in the supine position, a difference that was more marked during total lung distension (CPAP) than during normal breathing.  相似文献   

11.
Despite the heterogeneous distribution of pulmonary blood flow, perfusion appears to be spatially ordered, with neighboring regions of lung having similar magnitudes of flow. This premise was tested by determining the spatial correlation of regional flow [rho(d)] as a function of distance (d) between regions. Regional pulmonary perfusion was measured in both supine and prone positions in seven anesthetized mechanically ventilated dogs with radiolabeled microspheres. After excision and drying, the lungs were cubed into pieces 1.2 cm on a side, with a three-dimensional coordinate assigned to each piece. The microsphere-determined flow to each piece was measured by radioactive counts, and rho(d) was calculated for all paired pieces within the same lobe. rho(d) was greatest for adjacent pieces (d = 1.2 cm) and decreased with increasing d, becoming negative at large distances in all dogs and positions. The spatial correlation of flow between adjacent pieces, rho(1.2 cm), was greater in the supine than in the prone position (0.66 vs. 0.72, P less than 0.05). The observations for each dog and position were fit to the equation rho(d) = d(a)+b.d+c, and the coefficients were used to compare rho(d) in the supine and prone positions. rho(d) differed in the two positions (P less than 0.05), with rho(d) falling off more rapidly with distance in the supine position. When trends in flow due to gravity were mathematically removed, differences between supine and prone positions were no longer observed. The spatial correlation of regional pulmonary perfusion was anisotropic in both supine and prone positions. The observation that regional pulmonary perfusion is highly correlated over large spatial distances has important implications for models of flow distribution.  相似文献   

12.
We examined whether wedging a catheter (0.5 cm OD) into a subsegmental airway in dog (n = 6) or pig lungs (n = 5) and increasing pressure in the distal lung segment affected pulmonary blood flow. Dogs and pigs were anesthetized and studied in the prone position. Pulmonary blood flow was measured by injecting radiolabeled microspheres (15 microns diam) into the right atrium when airway pressure (Pao) was 0 cmH2O and pressure in the segment distal to the wedged catheter (Ps) was 0, 5, or 15 cmH2O and when Pao = Ps = 15 cmH2O. The lungs were excised, air-dried, and sectioned. Blood flow per gram dry weight normalized to cardiac output to the right or left lung, as appropriate, was calculated for the test segment, a control segment in the opposite lung corresponding anatomically to the test segment, the remainder of the lung containing the test segment (test lung), and the remainder of the lung containing the control segment (control lung). The presence of the catheter reduced blood flow in the test segment compared with that in the control segment and in the test lung. Blood flow was not affected by increasing pressure in the test segment. We conclude that, in studies designed to measure collateral ventilation in dog lungs, the presence of the wedged catheter is likely to have a greater effect on blood flow than the increase in pressure associated with measuring collateral airway resistance.  相似文献   

13.
To compare the relative contributions of gravity and vascular structure to the distribution of pulmonary blood flow, we flew with pigs on the National Aeronautics and Space Administration KC-135 aircraft. A series of parabolas created alternating weightlessness and 1.8-G conditions. Fluorescent microspheres of varying colors were injected into the pulmonary circulation to mark regional blood flow during different postural and gravitational conditions. The lungs were subsequently removed, air dried, and sectioned into approximately 2 cm(3) pieces. Flow to each piece was determined for the different conditions. Perfusion heterogeneity did not change significantly during weightlessness compared with normal and increased gravitational forces. Regional blood flow to each lung piece changed little despite alterations in posture and gravitational forces. With the use of multiple stepwise linear regression, the contributions of gravity and vascular structure to regional perfusion were separated. We conclude that both gravity and the geometry of the pulmonary vascular tree influence regional pulmonary blood flow. However, the structure of the vascular tree is the primary determinant of regional perfusion in these animals.  相似文献   

14.
Two types of unilateral lung edema in sheep were characterized regarding their effects on pulmonary gas exchange, hemodynamics, and distribution of pulmonary perfusion. One edema type was induced with aerosolized HCl (0.15 M, pH 1.0) and the other with NaCl (0.15 M, pH 7.4). Both aerosols were nebulized continuously for 4 h into left lungs. In HCl-treated animals, pulmonary gas exchange deteriorated [from a partial arterial O(2) pressure-to-inspired O(2) fraction ratio (Pa(O(2))/FI(O(2))) of 254 at baseline to 187 after 4 h HCl]. In addition, pulmonary artery pressure and total pulmonary vascular resistance increased (from 16 to 19 mmHg and from 133 to 154 dyn. s. cm(-5), respectively). In NaCl-treated animals, only the central venous pressure significantly increased (from 7 to 9 mmHg). Distribution of pulmonary perfusion (measured with fluorescent microspheres) changed differently in both groups. After HCl application, 6% more blood flow was directed to the treated lung, whereas, after NaCl, 5% more blood flow was directed to the untreated lung. HCl and NaCl treatment both induce an equivalent lung edema, but only HCl treatment is associated with gas exchange alteration and tissue damage. Redistribution of pulmonary perfusion maintains gas exchange during NaCl treatment and decreases it during HCl inhalation.  相似文献   

15.
Prone posture increases cardiac output and improves pulmonary gas exchange. We hypothesized that, in the supine posture, greater compression of dependent lung limits regional blood flow. To test this, MRI-based measures of regional lung density, MRI arterial spin labeling quantification of pulmonary perfusion, and density-normalized perfusion were made in six healthy subjects. Measurements were made in both the prone and supine posture at functional residual capacity. Data were acquired in three nonoverlapping 15-mm sagittal slices covering most of the right lung: central, middle, and lateral, which were further divided into vertical zones: anterior, intermediate, and posterior. The density of the entire lung was not different between prone and supine, but the increase in lung density in the anterior lung with prone posture was less than the decrease in the posterior lung (change: +0.07 g/cm(3) anterior, -0.11 posterior; P < 0.0001), indicating greater compression of dependent lung in supine posture, principally in the central lung slice (P < 0.0001). Overall, density-normalized perfusion was significantly greater in prone posture (7.9 +/- 3.6 ml.min(-1).g(-1) prone, 5.1 +/- 1.8 supine, a 55% increase; P < 0.05) and showed the largest increase in the posterior lung as it became nondependent (change: +71% posterior, +58% intermediate, +31% anterior; P = 0.08), most marked in the central lung slice (P < 0.05). These data indicate that central posterior portions of the lung are more compressed in the supine posture, likely by the heart and adjacent structures, than are central anterior portions in the prone and that this limits regional perfusion in the supine posture.  相似文献   

16.
Blood volume changes in the fetal lung following the onset of ventilation were studied by isotopic measurement of red blood cell and plasma volume in rapidly frozen lungs of ten near term fetal lambs. Total pulmonary blood volumes of fetal lambs ventilated with 3% O2 and 7% CO2 in nitrogen (so that blood gas levels were little changed from fetal values), or with air, were compared with measurements in unventilated lambs. Regional correlations of blood volume and blood flow (measured with isotope-labeled microemboli) within the lungs were also examined. Total pulmonary blood volume averaged 5.6 ml/kg body weight in unventilated fetal lambs and was approximately 43% greated in fetal lambs after 5-20 min of air ventilation, but not significantly different in lambs ventilated with 3% O2 and 7% CO2 in nitrogen. Thus it is ventilation with air, rather than the introduction of gas into the alveoli, which enlarges the fetal pulmonary vascular bed. Regional pulmonary blood volume and blood flow were correlated, though poorly, in air-ventilated lungs, but not in lungs ventilated with 3% O2 and 7% CO2 in nitrogen; this suggests that a common factor may operate to increase both blood flow and blood volume in the fetal lung following the introduction of air.  相似文献   

17.
Relative contribution of gravity to pulmonary perfusion heterogeneity.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We designed a series of experiments and analyses to quantify the contribution of gravity to pulmonary perfusion heterogeneity. Regional pulmonary perfusion was measured in five anesthetized and ventilated dogs in both supine and prone positions by use of radiolabeled microspheres injected during apnea at functional residual capacity. Measurements of flow were repeated in each position, and the sequence of positions was prospectively designed to nullify any effect of order. The lungs of each animal were excised, perfused with saline until clear, dried at an inflation pressure of 25 cmH2O, and cut into 1.9-cm3 pieces. Each piece was weighed and the radioactivity determined in a scintillation counter. Measurement errors were minimized by excluding lung pieces that had greater than 25% airway and weighed less than 10 mg or greater than 60 mg. Weight-normalized flows in each position and repetition were determined for each lung piece. An analysis of variance model was used to identify the percentage of variation in regional flow that was due to position (supine vs. prone), to random error and time (measurement and repetition), and to structure, where structure was defined as the component of flow that remained constant across position and replication. The contributions of position, error/time, and structure to the total variability of flow across the five dogs were 7.8 +/- 0.6, 8.4 +/- 8.3, and 83.8 +/- 8.4%, (SD), respectively. Because the contribution of position represents the additive effect of gravity between two opposite positions, the contribution of gravity to perfusion heterogeneity in one position may be as little as 4%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Distributions of pulmonary blood flow per unit lung volume were measured with subjects in the prone, supine, and sitting positions by means of radionuclide-computed tomography of intravenously administered 99mTc-labeled macroaggregates of human serum albumin. The blood flow was greater in the direction of gravity in all 31 subjects except one with severe mitral valve stenosis. With the subject in a sitting position, four different types of distribution were distinguished. One type had a three-zonal blood flow distribution as previously reported by West and co-workers (J. Appl. Physiol. 19: 713-724, 1964). Pulmonary arterial pressure and venous pressure estimated from this model showed reasonable agreement with pulmonary arterial pressure and capillary wedge pressure measured by Swan-Ganz catheter in 17 supine patients and in 2 sitting patients. The method makes possible noninvasive assessment of pulmonary vascular pressures.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The effects of ventilation-to-perfusion (VA/Qc) maldistribution within the lungs on measured multiple gas rebreathing variables were studied in 14 dogs. The rebreathing method (using He, C18O, and C2H2) allows for measurements of pulmonary capillary blood flow (Qc), diffusing capacity (DLco), lung gas volume, and the combined pulmonary tissue and capillary blood volume (VTPC). VA/Qc imbalance was created by reversibly occluding the right main pulmonary artery or by reversibly obstructing the left main bronchus in eight dogs. Six additional dogs were ventilated with 10 cmH2O positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) to create a bimodal distribution of VA/Qc within the lungs. No significant alterations in computed rebreathing variables, except for a small (14%) decrease in DLco, occurred during right main pulmonary artery occlusion, whereas obstruction of the left main bronchus caused parallel decreases (mean of 46%) in all rebreathing variables. Ventilation with 10 cmH2O PEEP for 3 h caused no alterations in VTPC when compared with postmortem determinations of total lung water. Thus marked alterations in distribution of Qc or creation of VA/Qc maldistributions with PEEP caused no significant changes in rebreathing parameters, whereas obstruction of the left main bronchus resulted in decreases in all rebreathing values consistent with the presumed size of the ventilation defect. Thus it appears that rebreathing estimates of VTPC and other rebreathing parameters are accurate in states of moderate VA/Qc maldistribution within the lung.  相似文献   

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