Affiliation:
1. Departments of Medicine and of
2. Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-6522
Abstract
Numerical methods for determining end-capillary gas contents for ventilation-to-perfusion ratios were first developed in the late 1960s. In the 1970s these methods were applied to validate distributions of ventilation-to-perfusion ratios measured by the multiple inert-gas-elimination technique. We combined numerical gas analysis and fluorescent-microsphere measurements of ventilation and perfusion to predict gas exchange at a resolution of ∼2.0-cm3 lung volume in pigs. Oxygen, carbon dioxide, and inert gas exchange were calculated in 551–845 compartments/animal before and after pulmonary embolization with 780-μm beads. Whole lung gas exchange was estimated from the perfusion- and ventilation-weighted end-capillary gas contents. Before lung injury, no significant difference existed between microsphere-estimated arterial [Formula: see text]and [Formula: see text] and measured values. After lung injury, the microsphere method predicted a decrease in arterial[Formula: see text] but consistently underestimated its magnitude. Correlation between predicted and measured inert gas retentions was 0.99. Overestimation of low-solubility inert gas retentions suggests underestimation of areas with low ventilation-to-perfusion ratios by microspheres after lung injury. Regional deposition of aerosolized and injected microspheres is a valid method for investigating regional gas exchange with high spatial resolution.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
52 articles.
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