Literature DB >> 19057006

Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction does not contribute to pulmonary blood flow heterogeneity in normoxia in normal supine humans.

T J Arai1, A C Henderson, D J Dubowitz, D L Levin, P J Friedman, R B Buxton, G K Prisk, S R Hopkins.   

Abstract

We hypothesized that some of the heterogeneity of pulmonary blood flow present in the normal human lung in normoxia is due to hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV). If so, mild hyperoxia would decrease the heterogeneity of pulmonary perfusion, whereas it would be increased by mild hypoxia. To test this, six healthy nonsmoking subjects underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during 20 min of breathing different oxygen concentrations through a face mask [normoxia, inspired O(2) fraction (Fi(O(2))) = 0.21; hypoxia, Fi(O(2)) = 0.125; hyperoxia, Fi(O(2)) = 0.30] in balanced order. Data were acquired on a 1.5-T MRI scanner during a breath hold at functional residual capacity from both coronal and sagittal slices in the right lung. Arterial spin labeling was used to quantify the spatial distribution of pulmonary blood flow in milliliters per minute per cubic centimeter and fast low-angle shot to quantify the regional proton density, allowing perfusion to be expressed as density-normalized perfusion in milliliters per minute per gram. Neither mean proton density [hypoxia, 0.46(0.18) g water/cm(3); normoxia, 0.47(0.18) g water/cm(3); hyperoxia, 0.48(0.17) g water/cm(3); P = 0.28] nor mean density-normalized perfusion [hypoxia, 4.89(2.13) ml x min(-1) x g(-1); normoxia, 4.94(1.88) ml x min(-1) x g(-1); hyperoxia, 5.32(1.83) ml x min(-1) x g(-1); P = 0.72] were significantly different between conditions in either imaging plane. Similarly, perfusion heterogeneity as measured by relative dispersion [hypoxia, 0.74(0.16); normoxia, 0.74(0.10); hyperoxia, 0.76(0.18); P = 0.97], fractal dimension [hypoxia, 1.21(0.04); normoxia, 1.19(0.03); hyperoxia, 1.20(0.04); P = 0.07], log normal shape parameter [hypoxia, 0.62(0.11); normoxia, 0.72(0.11); hyperoxia, 0.70(0.13); P = 0.07], and geometric standard deviation [hypoxia, 1.88(0.20); normoxia, 2.07(0.24); hyperoxia, 2.02(0.28); P = 0.11] was also not different. We conclude that HPV does not affect pulmonary perfusion heterogeneity in normoxia in the normal supine human lung.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19057006      PMCID: PMC2698636          DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.90759.2008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  47 in total

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3.  Quantification of regional pulmonary blood flow using ASL-FAIRER.

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5.  Hypoxia-induced pulmonary blood redistribution in subjects with a history of high-altitude pulmonary edema.

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8.  Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction is heterogeneously distributed in the prone dog.

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9.  Pulmonary blood flow heterogeneity during hypoxia and high-altitude pulmonary edema.

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10.  Spatial distribution of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction in the supine pig.

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Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2003-12-29
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  27 in total

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2.  Assessing potential errors of MRI-based measurements of pulmonary blood flow using a detailed network flow model.

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4.  Lung volume does not alter the distribution of pulmonary perfusion in dependent lung in supine humans.

Authors:  Susan R Hopkins; Tatsuya J Arai; A Cortney Henderson; David L Levin; Richard B Buxton; G Kim Prisk
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Review 5.  Imaging for lung physiology: what do we wish we could measure?

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6.  The effect of supine exercise on the distribution of regional pulmonary blood flow measured using proton MRI.

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7.  Pulmonary perfusion heterogeneity is increased by sustained, heavy exercise in humans.

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Review 8.  Determinants of regional ventilation and blood flow in the lung.

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Review 9.  Advances in functional and structural imaging of the human lung using proton MRI.

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10.  A statistical clustering approach to discriminating perfusion from conduit vessel signal contributions in a pulmonary ASL MR image.

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