Murine pulmonary acinar mechanics during quasi-static inflation using synchrotron refraction-enhanced computed tomography

Author:

Sera Toshihiro12,Yokota Hideo2,Tanaka Gaku3,Uesugi Kentaro4,Yagi Naoto4,Schroter Robert C.5

Affiliation:

1. Center for Advanced Medical Engineering and Informatics, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan;

2. Bio-research Infrastructure Construction Team, RIKEN, Saitama, Japan;

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Chiba University, Chiba, Japan;

4. Research & Utilization Division, Japan Synchrotron Radiation Research Institute, Hogyo, Japan; and

5. Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

We visualized pulmonary acini in the core regions of the mouse lung in situ using synchrotron refraction-enhanced computed tomography (CT) and evaluated their kinematics during quasi-static inflation. This CT system (with a cube voxel of 2.8 μm) allows excellent visualization of not just the conducting airways, but also the alveolar ducts and sacs, and tracking of the acinar shape and its deformation during inflation. The kinematics of individual alveoli and alveolar clusters with a group of terminal alveoli is influenced not only by the connecting alveolar duct and alveoli, but also by the neighboring structures. Acinar volume was not a linear function of lung volume. The alveolar duct diameter changed dramatically during inflation at low pressures and remained relatively constant above an airway pressure of ∼8 cmH2O during inflation. The ratio of acinar surface area to acinar volume indicates that acinar distension during low-pressure inflation differed from that during inflation over a higher pressure range; in particular, acinar deformation was accordion-like during low-pressure inflation. These results indicated that the alveoli and duct expand differently as total acinar volume increases and that the alveolar duct may expand predominantly during low-pressure inflation. Our findings suggest that acinar deformation in the core regions of the lung is complex and heterogeneous.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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