Hlastala M P, Bernard S L, Erickson H H, Fedde M R, Gaughan E M, McMurphy R, Emery M J, Polissar N, Glenny R W
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington, Seattle 98195-6522, USA.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 1996 Sep;81(3):1051-61. doi: 10.1152/jappl.1996.81.3.1051.
Recent studies using microspheres in dogs, pigs and goats have demonstrated considerable heterogeneity of pulmonary perfusion within isogravitational planes. These studies demonstrate a minimal role of gravity in determining pulmonary blood flow distribution. To test whether a gravitational gradient would be more apparent in an animal with large vertical lung height, we measured perfusion heterogeneity in horses (vertical lung height = approximately 55 cm). Four unanesthetized Thoroughbred geldings (422-500 kg) were studied awake in the standing position with fluorescent microspheres injected into a central vein. Between 1,621 and 2,503 pieces (1.3 cm3 in volume) were obtained from the lungs of each horse with spatial coordinates, and blood flow was determined for each piece. The coefficient of variation of blood flow throughout the lungs ranged between 22 and 57% among the horses. Considerable heterogeneity was seen in each isogravitational plane. The relationship between blood flow and vertical height up the lung was characterized by the slope and correlation coefficient of a least squares regression analysis. The slopes within each horse ranged from -0.052 to +0.021 relative flow units/cm height up the lung, and the correlation coefficients varied from 0.12 to 0.75. A positive slope, indicating that flow increased with vertical distance up the lung (opposite to gravity), was observed in three of the four horses. In addition, blood flow was uniformly low in three of the four horses in the most cranial portions of the lungs. We conclude that in lungs of resting unanesthetized horses, animals with a large lung height, there is no consistent vertical gradient to pulmonary blood flow and there is a considerable degree of perfusion heterogeneity, indicating that gravity alone does not play the major role in determining blood flow distribution.
最近在狗、猪和山羊身上使用微球进行的研究表明,在等重力平面内肺灌注存在相当大的异质性。这些研究表明重力在决定肺血流分布方面作用极小。为了测试在垂直肺高度较大的动物中重力梯度是否会更明显,我们测量了马(垂直肺高度约为55厘米)的灌注异质性。对四匹未麻醉的纯种阉马(体重422 - 500千克)在站立位清醒状态下进行研究,将荧光微球注入中心静脉。从每匹马的肺中获取1621至2503个(体积为1.3立方厘米)带有空间坐标的样本,并测定每个样本的血流情况。在这些马中,全肺血流的变异系数在22%至57%之间。在每个等重力平面都观察到了相当大的异质性。通过最小二乘回归分析的斜率和相关系数来表征血流与肺垂直高度之间的关系。每匹马的斜率范围为相对于肺向上每厘米高度 - 0.052至 + 0.021相对流量单位,相关系数在0.12至0.75之间变化。四匹马中有三匹马观察到正斜率,表明血流随肺垂直距离增加(与重力方向相反)。此外,四匹马中有三匹马肺最头端部分的血流一致较低。我们得出结论,在未麻醉的静息马的肺中,即肺高度较大的动物,肺血流不存在一致的垂直梯度,且存在相当程度的灌注异质性,这表明仅重力在决定血流分布方面并不起主要作用。