Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Postgraduate Medical School, Hammersmith Hospital, London, England
Abstract
The left lung from a dog was removed, ventilated with negative pressure, and perfused with venous blood. Pulmonary arterial, venous, and alveolar pressures could be varied over a large range. The distribution of blood flow in the lung was measured with Xe133. Under these conditions, there was no blood flow above the level at which alveolar equaled arterial pressure (measured at the arterial cannula). Below this level there was a linear increase in blood flow down the lung when the venous pressure was kept low. Raising the venous pressure made the distribution of flow more uniform below the level at which venous and alveolar pressures were equal although flow still increased down this zone. The flow distribution could be completely accounted for by the mechanical effects of the pressure inside and outside the blood vessels which each behaved like a Starling resistance. It was possible to simulate the flow distributions found in man in various physiological and diseased states. pulmonary; hydrostatic effect; Starling resistance Submitted on November 15, 1963
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
1187 articles.
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