Effect of increased gas density on pulmonary gas exchange in man
- 1 August 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 41 (2) , 206-210
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1976.41.2.206
Abstract
Pulmonary gas exchange was measured in seven resting supine subjects breathing air or a dense gas mixture containing 21% O2 in sulfur hexafluoride (SF6). The mean value of the alveolar-arterial oxygen difference (AaDO2) decreased from 12.4 on air to 7.0 on SF6 (P less than 0.01), and increased again to 13.4 when air breathing resumed (P less than 0.01). No differences occurred between gas mixtures for O2 consumption, respiratory quotient, minute ventilation, breathing frequency, heart rate, or blood pressure, and theimproved oxygen transfer could not be attributed to changes in cardiac output or mixed venous oxygen content in the one subject in which they were measured. These results are best explained by an altered distribution of ventilation during dense gas breathing, so that the ventilation-perfusion ratio(VA/Q) variance was reduced. Of several considered mechanisms, we favor onein which SF6 promotes cardiogenic gas mixing between peripheral parallel units having different alveolar gas concentrations. This mechanism allows forobserved increases in arterial carbon dioxide tension and dead space-to-tidal volume ratio during dense gas breathing, and suggests that intraregionalVA/Q variance accounts for at least one-half of the resting AaDO2 in healthysupine young men.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: