Author:
Wiener-Kronish J. P.,Gropper M. A.,Lai-Fook S. J.
Abstract
We have developed a minimally invasive method for measuring the hydrostatic pressure in the pleural space liquid. A liquid-filled capsule is bonded into a rib and a small hole is cut in the parietal pleura to allow direct communication between the liquid in the capsule and the pleural space. The pressure can be measured continuously by a strain gauge transducer connected to the capsule. The rib capsule does not distort the pleural space or require removal of intercostal muscle. Pneumothoraces are easily detected when they occur inadvertently on puncturing the parietal pleura. We examined the effect of height on pleural pressure in 15 anesthetized spontaneously breathing dogs. The vertical gradients in pleural pressure were 0.53, 0.42, 0.46, and 0.23 cmH2O/cm height for the head-up, head-down, supine, and prone body positions, respectively. These vertical gradients were much less than the hydrostatic value (1 cmH2O/cm), indicating that the pleural liquid is not in hydrostatic equilibrium. In most body positions the magnitudes of pleural liquid pressure interpolated to midchest level were similar to the mean transpulmonary (surface) pressure determined postmortem. This suggests that pleural liquid pressure is closely related to the lung static recoil.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
83 articles.
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