Relationship between regional pulmonary edema and blood flow

Abstract
We studied the effect of edema on the regional distribution of pulmonary blood flow in 12 anesthetized dogs. Two were controls, six had low-pressure pulmonary edema, and four had high-pressure pulmonary edema. All were ventilated with 100% O2. The physiological shunt fraction (.ovrhdot.Qs/.ovrhdot.QT), as an indicator of the degree of venous admixture, was determined by measuring the arterial and venous blood gases and the hemoglobin at different times during the experiment. Cardiac output (.ovrhdot.QT) was modestly increased by opening the femoral arteriovenous shunts. The initial regional blood flow (.ovrhdot.Qi) and final regional blood flow (.ovrhdot.Qf) were marked before and after the shunts were opened, using two differently labeled macroaggregates. The dogs were then killed, and the lungs were removed and sampled completely so that .ovrhdot.Qi and .ovrhdot.Qf and the amount of regional extravascular lung water (Wdl) in each regional sample could be measured (sample size: wet wt = 5.9 .+-. 2.9 g, n = 833; Wdl ranged from 5.15 .+-. 1.18 to 14.42 .+-. 2.34 g). The data show that .ovrhdot.QS/.ovrhdot.QT increased as .ovrhdot.QT increased in the three conditions studied. However, there was no correlation between Wdl and .ovrhdot.Qi, .ovrhdot.Qf, or the relative change in regional blood flow. The data also show that gravity affects regional blood flow more than it affects regional edema. We conclude that the increased .ovrhdot.Qs/.ovrhdot.QT seen with increased pulmonary blood flow cannot be explained by a preferential increase of blood flow to the more edematous regions.