Mechanical impedance of the lung periphery.
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 83 (5) , 1595-1601
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1997.83.5.1595
Abstract
Hantos, Z., F. Peták, Á. Adamicza, T. Asztalos, J. Tolnai, and J. J. Fredberg. Mechanical impedance of the lung periphery. J. Appl. Physiol.83(5): 1595–1601, 1997.—The mechanics of the regional airways and tissues was studied in isolated dog lobes by means of a modified wave-tube technique. Small-amplitude pseudorandom forced oscillations between 0.1 and 48 Hz were applied through catheters wedged in 2-mm-diameter bronchi in three regions of each lobe at translobar pressures (Pl) of 10, 7, 5, 3, 2, and 1 cmH2O. The measured regional input impedances were fitted by a model containing the resistance (R1) and inertance (I) of the regular (segmental) airways, the resistance of the collateral channels (R2), and the damping (G) and elastance (H) of the local tissues. This model gave far better fits to the data on impedance of the lung periphery than when G and H were replaced by a single tissue compliance, which explains why interruption of segmental flow did not lead to monoexponential pressure decay in previous studies. The interlobar and intralobar variances of the parameters were equally significant, and poor correlations were found between the airway parameters R1 and R2 and between any airway and tissue parameter (e.g., R1 and H). R2 was on average ∼10 times higher than R1, although the R2-to-R1ratios and their dependencies on Pl were regionally highly variable. However, for the total of 33 regions studied, the Pl dependence was the same for R1 and R2, which may reflect similar morphological structures for the regular and collateral airways. The dependencies of G and H on Plshowed high interregional variations; generally, however, they assumed their minima at medium Pl values (∼5 cmH2O).Keywords
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