Abstract

The difference in gas exchange performance between continuous and intermittent ventilatory flow is theoretically studied in the alveolar lung model. When measurements obtained with intermittent flow are analyzed assuming continuous flow, an apparent diffusing capacity, D app, results which is an underestimate of the true value D. This true value, D, may be assessed from measurements at continuous flow. With decreasing effective lung gas volume, V eff, D app increasingly deviates from D. The dependence of D app/D on V eff in the parabronchial lung seems to be similar to that in the alveolar lung. Experimental data of D app/D (Scheid et al., 1977) are used to assess Veff for the duck lung. The average value of V eff thus obtained, 93 ml, exceeds the anatomical estimate of parabronchial gas volume. Gas transfer across the open parabronchial ends may contribute in enlarging the parabronehial gas volume to the volume, V eff, that is effective as gas capacity in conditions of non-steady ventilatory flow.

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