Affiliation:
1. Departments of Surgery, Physiology, and Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 53226; Biomedical Engineering Department Marquette University, Milwaukee 53233; and Zablocki Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53295
Abstract
Chammas, Joseph H., David. A. Rickaby, Margarita Guarin, John H. Linehan, Christopher C. Hanger, and Christopher A. Dawson.Flow-induced vasodilation in the ferret lung. J. Appl. Physiol. 83(2): 495–502, 1997.—To examine the possibility that shear stress may be a pulmonary vasodilator stimulus, we studied the effect of changing blood flow on the diameters of small pulmonary arteries in isolated perfused ferret lung lobes. The arteries studied were in the ∼0.3- to 1.3-mm-diameter range, and the diameters were measured by using microfocal X-ray imaging. The diameters were measured at two flow rates, 10 and 40 ml/min, with the intravascular pressure in the measured vessels the same at the two flow rates as the result of venous pressure adjustment. The response to a change in flow was studied under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Hypoxia was used to elevate pulmonary arterial tone to increase the likelihood of detecting a vasodilator response. Under normoxic conditions, changing flow had little effect on the arterial diameters, but under hypoxic conditions the arteries were consistently larger at the higher flow than at the lower flow, even though the distending pressure was the same at the two flow rates. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that shear stress is a pulmonary vasodilator stimulus.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
19 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献