Abstract

The regional distribution of extravascular lung density (lung tissue and interstitial or alveolar fluid per unit thoracic volume) and fractional pulmonary blood volume (volume of blood per unit thoracic volume) was measured in five patients with acute interstitial pulmonary edema and two patients with acute alveolar edema. We found a uniform increase in extravascular lung density in the patients with acute interstitial edema but a preferentially dependent distribution in the patients with alveolar edema. Fractional blood volume had an abnormally uniform distribution in patients with interstitial edema. In alveolar edema, there was marked redistribution of blood volume away from severely edematous regions. The results are in agreement with previous experimental work with animal models. The distribution of extravascular lung density and fractional blood volume in subjects with acute interstitial edema is, however, different from that found in subjects with chronic interstitial edema, suggesting that the pathophysiological characteristics of the two conditions may be different.

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