Abstract

To study pulmonary arteriolar vasomotion in control conditions and in the transition to hydraulic edema, changes in subpleural pulmonary arteriolar diameter and perivascular interstitial volume were evaluated in anesthetized spontaneously breathing rabbits. Images of subpleural pulmonary microvessels were recorded in control conditions and for up to 180 min during a 0.5 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1) intravenous saline infusion through an intact parietal pleural window. Images were digitized and analyzed with a semiautomatic procedure to determine vessel diameter and perivascular interstitial thickness from which interstitial fluid volume was derived. In control vessels, the diameter of approximately 30-, approximately 50-, and approximately 80-microm arterioles and the perivascular interstitial thickness were fairly stable. During infusion, the diameter increased maximally by 20% in approximately 30 microm vessels, was unchanged in approximately 50 microm vessels, and decreased by 25% in approximately 80-microm arterioles; the perivascular interstitial volume increased by 54% only around 30-microm microvessels. In papaverine-treated rabbits, all arterioles dilated and a larger increase in perivascular interstitial thickness was observed. The data suggest that the opposite vasomotor behavior of 30- and 80-microm arterioles during development of mild edema may represent a local specific response of the pulmonary microcirculation to reduce capillary pressure in the face of an increased transendothelial fluid filtration, thus counteracting progression toward severe edema.

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