Abstract

The volume of liquid in the fetal lung depends on the amount of liquid secreted across the pulmonary epithelium and the amount flowing through the trachea. Lung liquid volume (V1) and secretion rate Vs) were determined using an indicator-dilution technique, while tracheal flow rate (Vtr) was measured simultaneously with a bubble flowmeter. Least-squares regression analysis showed that in 10 chronically instrumented fetal lambs, V1 increased from 51.0 ml at 119 days to 104.6 ml at 135 days (V1 = -347.65 + 3.35 X days; 95% confidence limits on slope: 1.89-4.81) before declining to 70.2 ml at 142 days gestation (V1 = 768.8 - 4.92 X days; 95% confidence limits on slope: -2.55 to -7.30). Similarly Vs increased from 7.4 ml/h at 119 days to 16.8 ml/h at 133 days (Vs = -72.35 + 0.67 X days; 95% confidence limits on slope: 0.21-1.14), before declining to 7.1 ml/h at 142 days (Vs = 159.07 - 1.07 X days; 95% confidence limits on slope: -0.56 to -1.57). Vtr did not change significantly with gestation. We conclude that V1 increases until 135 days gestation, after which it falls substantially. This fall in volume, which occurs well before the onset of labor, results predominantly from the decline in Vs.

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