Author:
Bachofen H.,Gehr P.,Weibel E. R.
Abstract
To assess the influence of alterations of lung surfactant on the geometry of peripheral air spaces, the morphology of detergent-rinsed rabbit lungs was studied. In comparison to normal excised rabbit lungs, fixed in the same manner by vascular perfusion at different points on the deflation pressure-volume curve, the most important differences are as follows. 1) With decreasing lung volume there is a progressive collapse of alveoli; at low lung volume (40% of total lung capacity (TLC) (most alveoli are collapsed, and the air is contained in overextended ducts. 2) Accordingly, the alveolar surface area-to-volume ratio is considerably smaller in particular at medium and low lung volumes. 3) There is only a slight change of mean air-space curvature between 80 and 40% TLC. Hence, the results indicate that in detergent-rinsed lungs volume changes are brought about predominantly by recruitment and derecruitment of alveoli. It appears that both a normal surfactant and the mechanical interdependence within the fibrous continuum are required to maintain a normal respiratory surface area within the lung volume range of normal breathing.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
124 articles.
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