Auckland Bioengineering Institute, University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2018 Jan 1;124(1):23-33. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00791.2016. Epub 2017 Oct 19.
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.
重力和匹配的气道/血管树几何形状都被假设为肺部通气-灌注(V̇/Q̇)匹配的关键因素,但它们的相对贡献很难通过实验来量化。我们使用基于结构的模型对组织变形(“Slinky”效应)、其他重力机制(血液重量和组织弹性回缩中的重力梯度)以及匹配的气道和动脉树几何形状对 V̇/Q̇匹配以及因此对整个肺氧交换的相对贡献进行了分析。我们的结果表明,当唯一的 V̇/Q̇匹配机制是组织变形或匹配的几何形状时,V̇和 Q̇的异质性最低,V̇和 Q̇之间的相关性最高。当所有机制都活跃(即在基线时)时,V̇和 Q̇的异质性最高,它们之间的相关性最差。消除匹配几何形状的贡献并没有改变基线时 V̇和 Q̇之间的相关性。尽管基线时 V̇和 Q̇的异质性要大得多,但共同的(对 V̇和 Q̇)重力机制的贡献提供了足够的补偿性 V̇/Q̇匹配,以最大限度地减少对氧传递的影响。总之,该模型预测,在受重力作用的仰卧正常呼吸期间,被动 V̇/Q̇匹配主要由共享的重力诱导的组织变形、顺应性分布以及静水压力梯度对血管和毛细血管大小和血压的影响决定。在正常重力下,模型中仰卧成人肺部的气道和动脉树几何形状匹配的贡献较小。
我们使用计算模型系统地分析了肺部通气-灌注匹配的贡献者。该模型预测,在正常重力负荷下,仰卧成人肺部的被动通气-灌注匹配的主要机制是重力的多种效应,而气道和动脉树的几何匹配作用较小。