Gregory T J, Ellsworth M L, Newell J C
J Appl Physiol Respir Environ Exerc Physiol. 1984 Jul;57(1):205-12. doi: 10.1152/jappl.1984.57.1.205.
We examined the effects of hypoxia and pulsatile flow on the pressure-flow relationships in the isolated perfused lungs of Fitch ferrets. When perfused by autologous blood from a pump providing a steady flow of 60 ml/min, the mean pulmonary arterial pressure rose from 14.6 to 31.3 Torr when alveolar PO2 was reduced from 122 to 46 Torr. This hypoxic pressor response was characterized by a 10.1-Torr increase in the pressure-axis intercept of the extrapolated pressure-flow curves and an increase in the slope of these curves from 130 to 240 Torr X l-1 X min. With pulsatile perfusion from a piston-type pump, mean pulmonary arterial pressure increased from 17.5 to 36.3 Torr at the same mean flow. This hypoxic pressor response was also characterized by increases in the intercept pressure and slope of the pressure-flow curves. When airway pressure was raised during hypoxia, the intercept pressure increased further to 25 +/- 1 Torr with a further increase in vascular resistance to 360 Torr X l-1 X min. Thus, in contrast to the dog lung, in the ferret lung pulsatile perfusion does not result in lower perfusion pressures during hypoxia when compared with similar mean levels of steady flow. Since the effects of high airway pressure and hypoxia are additive, they appear to act at or near the same site in elevating perfusion pressure.