Abstract

Regional pneumoconstriction induced by alveolar hypocapnia is an important homeostatic mechanism for optimization of ventilation-perfusion matching. We used positron imaging of 13NN-equilibrated lungs to measure the distribution of regional tidal volume (VT), lung volume (VL), and lung impedance (Z) before and after left (L) pulmonary artery occlusion (PAO) in eight anesthetized, open-chest dogs. Measurements were made during eucapnic sinusoidal ventilation at 0.2 Hz with 4-cmH2O positive end expiratory pressure. Right (R) and L lung impedances (ZR and ZL) were determined from carinal pressure and positron imaging of dynamic regional VL. LPAO caused an increase in magnitude of ZL relative to magnitude of ZR, resulting in a shift in VT away from the PAO side, with a L/R magnitude of Z ratio changing from 1.20 +/- 0.07 (mean +/- SE) to 2.79 +/- 0.85 after LPAO (P < 0.05). Although mean L lung VL decreased slightly, the VL normalized parameters specific admittance and specific compliance both significantly decreased with PAO. Lung recoil pressure at 50% total lung capacity also increased after PAO. We conclude that PAO results in an increase in regional lung Z that shifts ventilation away from the affected area at normal breathing frequencies and that this effect is not due to a change in VL but reflects mechanical constriction at the tissue level.

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