LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Gravity outweighs the contribution of structure to passive ventilation-perfusion matching in the supine adult human lung.

Photo by joelfilip from unsplash

Gravity and matched airway/vascular tree geometries are both hypothesized to be key contributors to ventilation-perfusion (V̇/Q̇) matching in the lung, but their relative contributions are challenging to quantify experimentally. We… Click to show full abstract

Gravity and matched airway/vascular tree geometries are both hypothesized to be key contributors to ventilation-perfusion (V̇/Q̇) matching in the lung, but their relative contributions are challenging to quantify experimentally. We used a structure-based model to conduct an analysis of the relative contributions of tissue deformation (the "Slinky" effect), other gravitational mechanisms (weight of blood and gravitational gradient in tissue elastic recoil), and matched airway and arterial tree geometry to V̇/Q̇ matching and therefore to total lung oxygen exchange. Our results showed that the heterogeneity in V̇ and Q̇ were lowest and the correlation between V̇ and Q̇ was highest when the only mechanism for V̇/Q̇ matching was either tissue deformation or matched geometry. Heterogeneity in V̇ and Q̇ was highest and their correlation was poorest when all mechanisms were active (that is, at baseline). Eliminating the contribution of matched geometry did not change the correlation between V̇ and Q̇ at baseline. Despite the much larger heterogeneities in V̇ and Q̇ at baseline, the contribution of in-common (to V̇ and Q̇) gravitational mechanisms provided sufficient compensatory V̇/Q̇ matching to minimize the impact on oxygen transfer. In summary, this model predicts that during supine normal breathing under gravitational loading, passive V̇/Q̇ matching is predominantly determined by shared gravitationally induced tissue deformation, compliance distribution, and the effect of the hydrostatic pressure gradient on vessel and capillary size and blood pressures. Contribution from the matching airway and arterial tree geometries in this model is minor under normal gravity in the supine adult human lung. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We use a computational model to systematically analyze contributors to ventilation-perfusion matching in the lung. The model predicts that the multiple effects of gravity are the predominant mechanism in providing passive ventilation-perfusion matching in the supine adult human lung under normal gravitational loads, while geometric matching of airway and arterial trees plays a minor role.

Keywords: ventilation perfusion; geometry; perfusion matching; gravity; lung

Journal Title: Journal of applied physiology
Year Published: 2018

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.