Zone 2 and zone 3 pulmonary blood flow

1987 ◽  
Vol 62 (5) ◽  
pp. 1982-1988 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Soohoo ◽  
H. S. Goldberg ◽  
R. Graham ◽  
A. C. Jasper

In the West model of zonal distribution of pulmonary blood flow, increases in flow down zone 2 are attributed to an increase in driving pressure and a decrease in resistance resulting from recruitment and distension. The increase in flow down zone 3 is attributed to a decrease in resistance only. Recent studies indicate that, besides the pressure required to maintain flow through a vessel, there is an added pressure cost that must be overcome in order to initiate flow. These additional pressure costs are designated critical pressures (Pcrit). Because Pcrit exceed alveolar pressure, the distinction between zones in the West model becomes less secure, and the explanation for the increase in flow even in West zone 3 requires reexamination. We used two methods to test the hypothesis that the Pcrit is the pertinent backpressure to flow even in zone 3, when the pulmonary venous pressure (Ppv) exceeds alveolar pressure (PA) but is less than Pcrit in the isolated canine left caudal lobe. First, PA was maintained at 5 cmH2O, and pressure flow (P-Q) characteristics were obtained in zone 2 and zone 3. Next, with PA still at 5 cmH2O, we maintained a constant flow and measured the change in pulmonary arterial pressure as Ppv was varied. Both techniques indicated that the pertinent backpressure to flow was the greater of either Pcrit or Ppv and that PA was never the pertinent backpressure to flow. Also, our results indicate no significant change in the geometry of the flow channels between zone 2 and zone 3. These findings refine the zonal model of the pulmonary circulation.

1960 ◽  
Vol 198 (4) ◽  
pp. 864-872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abraham M. Rudolph ◽  
Peter A. M. Auld

The effects of changes of pulmonary blood flow, pulmonary venous and pulmonary arterial pressure on calculated pulmonary vascular resistance were evaluated in open-chest, intact dogs, in which the pulmonary and systemic circulations were separately perfused. Similar observations were made after constricting the pulmonary vessels by continuous infusion of serotonin. An increase in pulmonary blood flow produced a decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance. At high flows, the calculated resistance in the serotonin-constricted vessels could be reduced to levels considered normal at lower flows in normal vessels. An increase of pulmonary venous pressure resulted in a decrease of calculated resistance up to pulmonary venous pressure levels of 15–20 mm Hg in ‘normal’ vessels, but in serotonin-constricted vessels, resistance continued to be decreased by increase of pulmonary venous pressure up to 25–30 mm Hg. These findings confirm that the usual formula for calculating pulmonary vascular resistance assesses only resistance to flow, but does not provide information regarding vascular tone.


1986 ◽  
Vol 108 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. C. Fung ◽  
F. Y. Zhuang

For pulmonary blood flow in zone 2 condition, in which the blood pressure in the venule (pven) is lower than the alveolar gas pressure (pA), the blood exiting from the capillary sheet and entering a venule must go through a sluicing gate. The sluicing gate exists because the venule remains patent [7] while the capillaries will collapse when the static pressure of blood falls below the alveolar gas pressure. In the original theory of sheet flow [4–6] the effect of the tension in the interalveolar septa on the flow through the sluicing gate was ignored. Since the tension multiplied by the curvature of the membrane is equivalent to a lateral pressure tending to open the gate, and since the curvature of the capillary wall is high in the gate region, this effect may be important. The present analysis improves the original theory and demonstrates that the effect of membrane tension is to cause flow to increase when the venous pressure continues to decrease. The shape of the sluicing gate resembles that of a venturi tube, and can be determined by an iterative integration of the differential equations. The result forms an important link in the theory of pulmonary blood flow in zone 2 condition.


1983 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 225-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Maeda ◽  
H. Itoh ◽  
Y. Ishii ◽  
G. Todo ◽  
T. Mukai ◽  
...  

Distributions of pulmonary blood flow per unit lung volume were measured with subjects in the prone, supine, and sitting positions by means of radionuclide-computed tomography of intravenously administered 99mTc-labeled macroaggregates of human serum albumin. The blood flow was greater in the direction of gravity in all 31 subjects except one with severe mitral valve stenosis. With the subject in a sitting position, four different types of distribution were distinguished. One type had a three-zonal blood flow distribution as previously reported by West and co-workers (J. Appl. Physiol. 19: 713–724, 1964). Pulmonary arterial pressure and venous pressure estimated from this model showed reasonable agreement with pulmonary arterial pressure and capillary wedge pressure measured by Swan-Ganz catheter in 17 supine patients and in 2 sitting patients. The method makes possible noninvasive assessment of pulmonary vascular pressures.


1985 ◽  
Vol 58 (6) ◽  
pp. 2004-2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. C. Beck ◽  
S. J. Lai-Fook

To obtain a detailed description of the dependence of pulmonary blood flow on changes in lung volume, we perfused isolated rabbit lungs with homologous blood at 37 degrees C while controlling vascular pressures during lung deflation. We set pulmonary arterial pressure (Ppa) and pulmonary venous pressure (Ppv) to constant values relative to alveolar pressure (Palv) to keep the effective driving pressure for flow constant during lung deflation from total lung capacity (TLC) to 25% TLC. The shapes of the flow vs. lung volume curves were dependent on the levels of Ppa-Palv and Ppv-Palv at which they were obtained. When Ppv greater than Palv throughout the lung (zone 3 conditions), flow increased as the lungs were deflated from TLC, independent of the level of Ppa-Palv. When Ppv less than Palv (zone 2 conditions) and Ppa-Palv was moderately high, flow increased as the lungs were deflated from 100 to approximately 50% TLC, then decreased at lower lung volumes. When Ppa - Palv was less than 10 cmH2O in zone 2 conditions, flow decreased monotonically during deflation from TLC. We concluded that the dependence of blood flow on lung volume is complex, which may be a reflection of the nonlinear pressure-diameter properties of pulmonary vessels.


2000 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. E. Lamm ◽  
R. K. Albert

Observations made on vessels seen directly beneath the pleura may not accurately reflect what occurs in vessels located deeper in the interior of the lung. We quantified flow to subpleural and deeper, interior regions under zone 1 or 2 conditions in excised ( n = 5) and in vivo ( n = 6) rabbit lungs, in the head-up or inverted position. After infusion of radiolabeled microspheres, lungs were dried at alveolar pressure of 25 cmH2O and sliced in 1-cm sections along the gravitational plane and in three planes in the dorsal-ventral axis. Regions located <1 mm from the pleural surface were dissected away from the remaining tissue. In both zonal conditions, 1) weight-normalized flow to the interior exceeded that found in subpleural regions; and 2) flow followed the gravitational gradient, with the correlation varying with the scale of measurement. We conclude that flow through subpleural vessels is less than that which occurs deeper in the interior, but the regional distributions of flow and the effects of zonal conditions are similar in the two regions.


1986 ◽  
Vol 61 (6) ◽  
pp. 2136-2143 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. C. Curran-Everett ◽  
K. McAndrews ◽  
J. A. Krasney

The effects of acute hypoxia on regional pulmonary perfusion have been studied previously in anesthetized, artificially ventilated sheep (J. Appl. Physiol. 56: 338–342, 1984). That study indicated that a rise in pulmonary arterial pressure was associated with a shift of pulmonary blood flow toward dorsal (nondependent) areas of the lung. This study examined the relationship between the pulmonary arterial pressor response and regional pulmonary blood flow in five conscious, standing ewes during 96 h of normobaric hypoxia. The sheep were made hypoxic by N2 dilution in an environmental chamber [arterial O2 tension (PaO2) = 37–42 Torr, arterial CO2 tension (PaCO2) = 25–30 Torr]. Regional pulmonary blood flow was calculated by injecting 15-micron radiolabeled microspheres into the superior vena cava during normoxia and at 24-h intervals of hypoxia. Pulmonary arterial pressure increased from 12 Torr during normoxia to 19–22 Torr throughout hypoxia (alpha less than 0.049). Pulmonary blood flow, expressed as %QCO or ml X min-1 X g-1, did not shift among dorsal and ventral regions during hypoxia (alpha greater than 0.25); nor were there interlobar shifts of blood flow (alpha greater than 0.10). These data suggest that conscious, standing sheep do not demonstrate a shift in pulmonary blood flow during 96 h of normobaric hypoxia even though pulmonary arterial pressure rises 7–10 Torr. We question whether global hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction is, by itself, beneficial to the sheep.


1986 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 331-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. W. Smits ◽  
N. H. West ◽  
W. W. Burggren

Pulmonary hemodynamics and net transcapillary fluid flux (NTFF) were measured in conscious toads before and following bilateral denervation of the recurrent laryngeal nerves (rLN), which contain afferents from baroreceptors located in the pulmocutaneous arteries. Denervation caused an acute doubling of the arterial-venous pressure gradient across the lung and a threefold increase in pulmonary blood flow. Calculated pulmonary vascular resistance fell and remained below control values through the period of experimentation. NTFF increased by an order of magnitude (0.74–7.77 ml X kg-1 X min-1), as filtration increased in response to the hemodynamic changes caused by rLN denervation. There was a better correlation between NTFF and pulmonary blood flow than between NTFF and pulmonary driving pressure. Our results support the view that tonic neural input from pulmocutaneous baroreceptors protects the anuran lung from edema by restraining pulmonary driving pressure and blood flow and perhaps by reflexly maintaining vascular tone in the extrinsic pulmonary artery, therefore tending to increase the pre-to-postpulmonary capillary resistance ratio and biasing the Starling relationship in the pulmonary capillaries against filtration.


2001 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 420-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabeth V. Stenbøg ◽  
Daniel A. Steinbrüchel ◽  
Anne Bloch Thomsen ◽  
Ulrik Baandrup ◽  
Lene Heickendorff ◽  
...  

Introduction: Hypertension and hyperperfusion of the pulmonary vascular bed in the setting of congenital cardiac malformations may lead to progressive pulmonary vascular disease. To improve the understanding of the basic mechanisms of this disease, there is a need for clinically relevant animal models which reflect the disease process. Material and Results: We randomly allocated 45 newborn pigs, at the age of 48 hrs, to groups in which there was either construction of a 3 mm central aorto-pulmonary shunt, undertaken in 9, or ligation of the left pulmonary artery, achieved in 13. Controls included sham operations in 13, or no operations in 10 pigs. Follow-up was continued for three months. The interventions were compatible with survival in most pigs. The shunts resulted in an acute 85% increase in systolic pulmonary arterial pressure, and a more than twofold increase in pulmonary blood flow. By three months of age, nearly all shunts had closed spontaneously, and haemodynamics were normal. Ligation of the left pulmonary artery resulted in a normal total pulmonary blood flow, despite only the right lung being perfused, and a 33% increase in systolic pulmonary arterial pressure. These haemodynamic changes were maintained throughout the period of study. In both groups, histomorphometry revealed markedly increased muscularity of the intra-acinar pulmonary arteries. Circulating levels of endothelin were normal in the shunted animals, and elevated in those with ligation of the left pulmonary artery. Conclusion: In neonatal porcine models of pulmonary vascular disease, created by construction of 3 mm central aorto-pulmonary shunts and ligation of one pulmonary artery, we observed histopathological changes of the pulmonary vasculature similar to early hypertensive pulmonary vascular disease in humans. Elevated circulating levels of endothelin were associated with abnormal haemodynamics rather than abnormal pathology. These findings could be valuable for future studies on the pathogenesis of hypertensive pulmonary vascular disease associated with congenital cardiac malformations.


1975 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 672-679 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Caldini ◽  
J. D. Leith ◽  
M. J. Brennan

The effect of CPPV on edema formation in lungs perfused at constant blood flow was studied in whole dogs and in isolated dog lungs. In intact animals, subjected to an increase in left atrial pressure relative to pleural pressure of 40 Torr, pulmonary shunts correlate inversely (r = -0.82) with the level of end-expiratory pressure (PEE). CPPV had no significant effect on total extravasation of liquid even though PEE higher than 20 Torr was effective in preventing liquid from accumulating in the airways. In isolated lobes, perfused at constant blood flow and at a venous pressure of zero, accumulation of liquid occurred when PEE was increased above 8–10 Torr. At comparable levels of pulmonary arterial pressure, an increase in PEE resulted in lesser accumulation of liquid than when pulmonary venous pressure was elevated. Morphometric measurements revealed no significant difference in the distribution of accumulated liquid within the lung parenchyma between lobes made edematous either by raising venous pressuure or by raising PEE. It would appear that CPPV, while beneficial in improving arterial oxygen tension in pulmonary edema, does not prevent extravasation of liquid in lungs perfused at constant blood flow. High levels of PEE appear to damage the lung by favoring accumulation of liquid in the extravascular spaces of the lung.


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