Effect of atelectasis and embolization on extravascular thermal volume of the lung

Abstract
The extravascular volume of distribution for heat in the lung has been advocated for the measurement of lung water. The purpose of these experiments was to investigate how extremes of ventilation-perfusion mismatch influence this measurement. Twenty-six dogs were studied with right and left atrium-to-aorta thermal and dye-dilution curves before and 60 min after total right main-stem bronchial obstruction or microembolization of the pulmonary circulation with 0.275-mm glass beads. Whereas atelectasis had no influence on our measurements, embolization with 0.32 g/kg of beads decreased the detected pulmonary blood volume from 10.63 to 8.55 ml/kg and increased the extravascular thermal volume (ETV) from 9.89 to 10.99 ml/kg. Embolization with 0.65 g/kg decreased the detected ETV from 9.29 to 8.38 ml/kg, while the extravascular wet-to-dry weight ratio was increased, and the regression of postmortem extravascular mass on ETV differed from control. We conclude that microembolization but not atelectasis causes errors in the measurement of lung fluid when the thermodye technique is used. The errors are variable and depend on the degree of embolization.

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