Mechanism of the lung-deflating action of the canine diaphragm at extreme lung inflation

Author:

Leduc Dimitri1,Cappello Matteo1,Gevenois Pierre Alain1,De Troyer André1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Cardiorespiratory Physiology, Brussels School of Medicine; and Chest Service, and Department of Radiology, Erasme University Hospital, Brussels, Belgium

Abstract

When lung volume in animals is passively increased beyond total lung capacity (TLC; transrespiratory pressure = +30 cmH2O), stimulation of the phrenic nerves causes a rise, rather than a fall, in pleural pressure. It has been suggested that this was the result of inward displacement of the lower ribs, but the mechanism is uncertain. In the present study, radiopaque markers were attached to muscle bundles in the midcostal region of the diaphragm and to the tenth rib pair in five dogs, and computed tomography was used to measure the displacement, length, and configuration of the muscle and the displacement of the lower ribs during relaxation at seven different lung volumes up to +60 cmH2O transrespiratory pressure and during phrenic nerve stimulation at the same lung volumes. The data showed that 1) during phrenic nerve stimulation at 60 cmH2O, airway opening pressure increased by 1.5 ± 0.7 cmH2O; 2) the dome of the diaphragm and the lower ribs were essentially stationary during such stimulation, but the muscle fibers still shortened significantly; 3) with passive inflation beyond TLC, an area with a cranial concavity appeared at the periphery of the costal portion of the diaphragm, forming a groove along the ventral third of the rib cage; and 4) this area decreased markedly in size or disappeared during phrenic stimulation. It is concluded that the lung-deflating action of the isolated diaphragm beyond TLC is primarily related to the invaginations in the muscle caused by the acute margins of the lower lung lobes. These findings also suggest that the inspiratory inward displacement of the lower ribs commonly observed in patients with emphysema (Hoover's sign) requires not only a marked hyperinflation but also a large fall in pleural pressure.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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