Abstract

To study the relationship between bronchomotor tone, static mechanical properties of the lung, and ventilation distribution, we measured the pressure-volume (P-V) curve of the lung and several ventilatory indexes before and after intravenous atropine in eight normal subjects. The indexes of ventilation distribution were derived from multiple breath N2 washouts by a recently developed analysis (7,8). The latter not only provides a sensitive measure of overall ventilation inhomogeneity but distinguishes between the convection-dependent inhomogeneity (CDI) among larger lung units and that due to the interaction of convection and diffusion (DCDI) within the lung periphery. Atropine decreased lung elastic recoil but distensibility, as defined by the exponent (K) in the monoexponential analysis of the P-V data, was unchanged. The overall ventilation inhomogeneity increased by 37% after atropine (P less than 0.02) due to an increase in the CDI component. More importantly, there was a significant correlation between the loss of lung recoil (but not K) and each of the indexes of CDI among the subjects. There was no correlation between the changes in lung recoil and in DCDI. Our findings indicate that normal bronchomotor tone contributes to the elastic recoil of the lung. Furthermore, the tone is distributed in a way that enhances the uniformity of ventilation distribution among diffusion-independent lung units. Presumably this is achieved by minimizing interacinar intrinsic inequalities in static mechanical properties.

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