Abstract

The physiological basis of a characteristically low blood flow to the fetal lungs is incompletely understood. To determine the potential role of pulmonary vascular interaction in this phenomenon, simultaneous wave intensity analysis (WIA) was performed in the pulmonary trunk (PT) and left pulmonary artery (LPA) of 10 anesthetized late-gestation fetal sheep instrumented with PT and LPA micromanometer catheters to measure pressure (P) and transit-time flow probes to obtain blood velocity (U). Studies were performed at rest and during brief complete occlusion of the ductus arteriosus to augment pulmonary vasoconstriction (n = 4) or main pulmonary artery to abolish wave transmission from the lungs (n = 3). Wave intensity (dI(W)) was calculated as the product of the P and U rates of change. Forward and backward components of dI(W) were determined after calculation of wave speed. PT and LPA WIA displayed an early systolic forward compression wave (FCW(is)) increasing P and U, and a late systolic forward expansion wave decreasing P and U. However, a marked midsystolic fall in LPA U to near-zero was related to an extremely prominent midsystolic backward compression wave (BCW(ms)) that arose approximately 5 cm distal to the LPA, was threefold larger than the PT BCW(ms) (P < 0.001), of similar size to FCW(is) at rest (P > 0.6), larger than FCW(is) following ductal occlusion (P < 0.05) and abolished after main pulmonary artery occlusion. These findings suggest that the absence of pulmonary arterial midsystolic forward flow which accompanies a low fetal lung blood flow is due to a BCW(ms) generated in part by cyclical vasoconstriction within the pulmonary microcirculation.

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