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CH 17
CH 17
VENTILATIONPERFUSION RELATIONSHIPS
Peter D. Wagner
remaining from prior breaths. Because oxygen molecules move continually across the bloodgas barrier into the pulmonary capillary blood, the alveolar oxygen level from prior breaths is considerably lower than inspired. The freshly inhaled oxygen thus tops up the alveolar oxygen store, replacing the molecules that have moved into the blood. This process serves to stabilize the alveolar oxygen concentration over time at about 14%, or about 100 mm Hg. An analogy would be adding 1 gallon of gasoline every 20 miles to the tank of a car that does 20 miles per gallon: the amount of gasoline in the tank will oscillate around 0.5 gallons about a constant level as long as topping up is continued. Each gallon added is the equivalent of each breath raising alveolar oxygen levels; continued driving depletes the fuel level at a steady rate, much as oxygen molecules constantly move into the blood to supply the cells of the body. If the fuel tank is large relative to the 1-gallon tidal volume of gasoline, the fuel level oscillations are relatively small, allowing a simple view of the tank as having an essentially constant amount of gasoline over time. Since tidal volume is normally only about 500 mL, whereas functional residual capacity (FRC) is some 4,000 mL, the oscillations of oxygen about the mean are indeed very small. Thus, if average alveolar PO2 is about 100 mm Hg, each inspiration raises this to about 102 mm Hg. During each expiration, it is obvious that no oxygen can move from the air to the alveoli, but oxygen still moves from the alveolar gas into the blood, reducing the alveolar PO2 to about 98 mm Hg by the end of the exhalation. For most purposes, it is entirely satisfactory to consider the alveolar PO2 to be constant over time, despite the tidal nature of breathing and the 2 mm Hg PO2 oscillation.1 Once oxygen has moved across the bloodgas barrier into the pulmonary capillary blood, a process of passive diffusion,2 almost all of it ( 98%) binds to hemoglobin in the red blood cells. The remainder is physically dissolved in the water of the plasma and red cells. These cells spend only about 0.75 seconds3 in the pulmonary microcirculation taking on oxygen molecules. This period of time reflects the high rate of bloodflow through the pulmonary vascular bed (about 6 L /min) and the small capillary blood volume at any instant (about 75 mL). The ratio of capillary volume to
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bloodflow [75 mL /(6 L /min)] is the average transit time, and this indeed comes to 0.75 seconds. In normal lungs at rest, the time required to fully load oxygen onto hemoglobin is only about 0.25 seconds,4 and thus there is considerable reserve capacity in the oxygen-diffusing capacity of the lung. This is explained by the very large alveolar wall surface area through which the oxygen diffuses, some 80 m2 in all, and the very short diffusion distance separating alveolar gas from capillary blood, both mentioned above. The end result is that in normal lungs at rest, the PO2 in the blood exiting the pulmonary capillary network is virtually equal to that of the alveolar gas (100 mm Hg) and diffusion equilibration is said to be complete. The PO2 in the blood leaving the lungs is thus also about 100 mm Hg. Because of the shape of the oxygenhemoglobin dissociation curve, essentially all oxygen-binding sites (98 of every 100) contain oxygen at this pressure of 100 mm Hg. In other words, the oxygen saturation of blood leaving the lungs is 98%. Whereas the process of ventilation is tidal, with sequential inspiration and expiration occurring through the same system of airways, bloodflow through the lung vasculature is unidirectional. Thus, the right ventricle pumps partially deoxygenated blood returned from the various body tissues through the pulmonary arterial tree to the capillary bed, where reoxygenation takes place as described. The oxygenated blood then is collected in the pulmonary veins, which forward the blood to the left heart for distribution to the tissues. What enables passive diffusion to accomplish the transfer of oxygen from alveolar gas into the blood is the fact that alveolar PO2 is much higher (at 100 mm Hg) than the PO2 of the blood returning from the tissues (normally about 40 mm Hg). The fall in PO2 from 100 (arterial) to 40 mm Hg (venous) as blood traverses the body reflects the extraction of oxygen by each tissue to support its metabolic needs. Figure 17-1 depicts the entire process in a homogeneous or one-compartment lung. The processes of ventilation, diffusion, and bloodflow are indicated, along with the normal oxygen and carbon dioxide partial pressures in alveolar gas and pulmonary arterial and venous blood. The gas exchange process is intrinsically inefficient. Thus, exhaled alveolar gas has considerable oxygen in it (14% of expired gas is oxygen, equivalent to 100 mm Hg as mentioned), and inspired air contains 21% oxygen at 150 mm Hg. Thus, only about one-third of the inhaled oxygen is absorbed, and considerable ventilatory effort is therefore wasted (compared with a hypothetically perfectly efficient lung, in which all of the inhaled oxygen would be taken up). Similarly, since blood returning from the tissues still has a PO2 of 40 mm Hg (which corresponds to an oxygen hemoglobin saturation of about 75%), only about 25% of the oxygen in each red blood cell is transferred to the tissues to support metabolism. Considerable cardiac contractile effort is therefore wasted as well. In addition, the process of diffusion appears overendowed, when we consider that the transit time, at 0.75 seconds, is three times as long as required. One could hypothetically survive the removal of two-thirds of the lung tissue and still have sufficient time for diffusion equilibration (at rest).
Ventilation
Conducting airways PAO2 = 100 PACO2 = 40 Diffusion Pulmonary artery PvO2 = 40 PvCO2 = 45 Pulmonary vein PcO2 = 100 PcCO2 = 40
Alveoli
Capillaries Bloodflow
FIGURE 17-1 The principal structures involved in pulmonary gas exchange and their functions. Gas exchange is an integrated process involving ventilation, bloodflow, and diffusion.
There are reasons, however, why the body imposes these taxes on itself. First, maintaining alveolar PO2 at 100 mm Hg is important because when the arterial blood reaches the various tissue beds, the unloading of oxygen is, as in the lung, a process of passive diffusion. This requires a high incoming PO2 in the arterial blood to provide the diffusion gradient to the tissues. Thus, when arterial PO2 is reduced, such as at altitude, exercise capacity is also reduced, in large part because of the reduction in the bloodtissue gradient of oxygen driving diffusion. Second, the reserve capacity in capillary transit time seen at rest reflects the need for greatly increased oxygen uptake during exercise. If the lungs were not overbuilt for resting conditions, little exercise could be accomplished because during exercise oxygen would not be able to be transferred from alveolar gas to capillary blood sufficiently quickly. Third, the low tissue extraction rate of 25% noted above also reflects the need to be able to extract more oxygen from each red cell during exercise to support much higher metabolic rates.
VentilationPerfusion Relationships
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breath. The left and right lungs lie in physically separate parts of the thoracic cavity. The intrapleural space between the surface of the lungs and the inner surface of the chest wall contains only a thin film of liquid. Since the lungs are elastic, they have a natural tendency to collapse away from the chest wall. The lungs are kept inflated and do not collapse, by virtue of the subatmospheric pressure in the intrapleural space. This pressure is below atmospheric because the lungs tend to collapse whereas the chest wall tends to spring out. These opposing tendencies create a stable state of lung inflation with a negative intrapleural pressure. If the integrity of the intrapleural space on either side of the chest is violated (as may happen in chest wall trauma or with spontaneous pneumothorax), the lung on that side will collapse like a punctured balloon. In such a situation, breathing efforts will be ineffectual, and thus the lung will remain unventilated, obviously compromising gas exchange, with potentially fatal consequences. The need for sequential inflation and deflation in a system where gas exchange occurs by diffusion through very thin alveolarcapillary membranes imposes constraints on lung structure that result in a delicate tissue framework susceptible to pneumothorax.
DEAD SPACE
Because gas exchange occurs by passive diffusion, a very large alveolar surface area is needed in order for sufficient oxygen to reach the pulmonary capillaries. Suppose that the lung, with a volume (V) at FRC of 4,000 mL, were a single spherical large alveolus. Since volume is given by the formula V (4/3) x r3, the radius, r, would be about 10 cm. Since the surface area (A) of this sphere is given by the formula A 4 x r2, total surface area would be about 1,200 cm2. Given the thickness (about 0.3 m) of the bloodgas barrier, it was noted above that an area of about 80 m2 is required to enable the rates of oxygen uptake required for heavy exercise. This is 800,000 cm2. Thus, a single large alveolus would have more than 600-fold too small a surface area to support gas exchange during exercise. From the above area and volume formulae, it should be apparent that the surface area/volume ratio of a sphere (A/V) increases as its diameter is reduced. Thus, to achieve a sufficient surface area for gas exchange within a 4 L total volume, the lung must be constructed not as a single sphere but rather as a parallel collection of many smaller spheres the alveoli. It turns out that to have an 80 m2 surface area with a 4 L total volume, about 300 million spheres of diameter about 300 m would be needed. The consequence of this requirement is the herculean task of ventilating each alveolus with relatively equal amounts of air on each breath. Much like a bunch of grapes on a branched stem, the alveoli (grapes) are connected to a branched system of conducting airways (stem). This treetrunk-like system of airways has to branch some 23 times in order to supply such a large number of alveoli. The total volume of these conducting airways is considerable, and it should be clear that all inhaled air must negotiate these airways before it reaches the alveoli where gas exchange takes place. Down to about the sixteenth branch
point, the airways are constructed robustly only for delivery of air, and no oxygen crosses the thick walls of these first 16 branches to contribute to overall oxygen uptake. The total volume of these 16 generations of airways in the average person is about 150 mL5 and is called the anatomic dead space. Of every tidal breath taken, normally about 500 mL, only 350 mL of fresh air will reach the alveoli and take part in oxygen uptake. If there are 15 breaths/min, total ventilation will be 15 500 mL /min, or 7.5 L /min. However, alveolar ventilation (that amount of fresh air reaching the alveoli) is only 15 (500 150) mL /min, or 5.3 L /min. The normal dead space is thus about 30% of the tidal volume, and the ventilation associated with it (2.2 L /min in this example) is termed wasted ventilation. One must ventilate some 40% more to achieve a given level of oxygen uptake than if there were no conducting airway system. This requirement may be problematic in patients with severe lung disease and is the basis for the use of transtracheal catheter administration of air or oxygen to patients with impaired ventilation. Direct insufflation of air into the trachea functionally eliminates that part of the anatomic dead space above the trachea (the larynx and oropharynx). This reduces the amount of ventilation needed to support a given metabolic rate.
AIRWAY INFECTION/INFLAMMATION
The progressive branching of the airways imposes not only dead space but also ever-narrowing and increasing numbers of airways with each generation (or branching). In the small bronchioles, because of their enormous number, the total cross-sectional area is so high that the linear velocity of gas becomes very low. This favors the settling out of large, inhaled particles (such as dust particles, bacteria, or viruses), which may adhere to the airway wall and initiate inflammation. Here, as elsewhere in the airways, edema and secretions can develop. In the small airways in particular, the lumen cross-section can then be significantly reduced, impairing distal alveolar ventilation.
DYNAMIC COMPRESSION
OF THE
AIRWAYS
Yet another consequence of the branching airway system is that smaller peripheral airways (which lack cartilage in their walls), in particular, become susceptible to compression during exhalation. During quiet breathing at rest this does not occur, but during forceful exhalations, such as seen during
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exercise, the resulting positive intrapleural pressure can compress these airways, resulting in limitation of airflow. This problem is known as dynamic compression. To the extent that this phenomenon occurs unevenly throughout the lung, as a result of both gravitational and nongravitational influences, it will add to the possibility of inequality of ventilation. In young healthy people, it is not of much concern. It is seen more with advancing age, as the elastic recoil of the lungs diminishes,6 and is a hallmark of emphysema, where elastic recoil is greatly reduced. Reduced elastic recoil is a factor because dynamic compression is to some extent counteracted by outward radial traction imposed on airways by alveoli connected to them, and the strength of such radial traction depends on elastic recoil.
ALVEOLAR COLLAPSE
The alveolar epithelial surface is wet, as are all body tissues. Yet this surface, on the inside of each alveolus, is in direct contact with air. This creates a (roughly spherical) airliquid interface, and surface tension must therefore exist. As with soap bubbles, such surface tension acts to reduce the surface area of the interface, so that alveoli are intrinsically prone to collapse. The law of LaPlace shows that the smaller the alveolar radius, the greater will be the tendency for collapse to occur because of this surface tension. Thus, having a great many small bubbles rather than fewer large ones may serve gas exchange well but puts the lungs at risk of collapse. Without special molecules that greatly reduce the surface tension of the alveolar lining fluid (surfactant), widespread lung collapse would occur. This is indeed seen clinically in premature infants, whose surfactant system is immature, and in acute lung injury at any age, when the surfactant system malfunctions.
they are galloping, for example8). It could also possibly result from excessive stretch of the alveolar wall (as happens during mechanical ventilation of ill patients when inflation pressures are excessive). Since the bloodgas barrier is predominantly formed of capillary walls (mated to alveolar epithelium), its disruption leads to local inflammation, edema, and, when severe, even frank hemorrhage of blood into the alveoli. Any of these effects may impair gas exchange. It is remarkable that in the face of all these challenges, gas exchange proceeds as smoothly as it does, even in health. It is testament to the success of evolutionary countermeasures to these problemsphenomena such as making the alveoli support each other mechanically by being physically joined together; reducing surface tension by surfactant production; clearing inhaled particles by means of scavenger cells (macrophages) and the mucociliary airway clearance system; and a pulmonary microvasculature that keeps blood pressures low (when flow is increased) by mechanisms of recruitment and distention of blood vessels.
PULMONARY EDEMA
The balance of hydrostatic and osmotic forces between the blood in the pulmonary capillaries and the fluid in the interstitium around them is such that there is a net force driving fluid out of the capillaries into the interstitium of the bloodgas barrier. Were this fluid to accumulate, the blood gas barrier would thicken, and this would reduce the rate of diffusive equilibration for oxygen and carbon dioxide between the alveolar gas and capillary blood. It would also make affected alveolar walls stiffer and thus more difficult to inflate during inspiration. That such fluid does not normally accumulate is because of the pulmonary lymphatic system, which collects such fluid and facilitates its transport back into the systemic venous system along a lymph vessel tree that follows the airway branching pattern centrally and ends in the superior vena cava. Lymphatic obstruction or overwhelming the system with high rates of fluid transudation does, in fact, cause pulmonary edema, and lung function can accordingly be impaired.
CAPILLARY INTEGRITY
Finally, the very delicate nature of the bloodgas barrier (about 0.3 m thick) makes it vulnerable to disruption when stressed.7 This can result from high intracapillary blood pressure (as happens frequently in race horses when
VentilationPerfusion Relationships
Ventilation (L/min), bloodflow (L/min) and ventilation/bloodflow ratio 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 Ventilation 0.0 Top Bottom Relative position from top to bottom of the lung Bloodflow Ventilation/bloodflow ratio
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substantial, and it has been claimed that, as a result, nongravitational causes of both ventilation and perfusion inequality are more important than those based on gravity. If that were true, it would imply that whereas ventilation and bloodflow were each nonuniform, variations in each must correlate, such that the nonuniformity in their ratio (ventilation/perfusion ratio) is far less. This conclusion is based on the fact that the gravitational gradient in ventilation/ perfusion ratios accounts for the majority of the normal alveolararterial PO2 difference,9 leaving very little that can be due to other, nongravitational causes.
FIGURE 17-2 Data from West9 showing the systematic changes in ventilation, bloodflow, and their ratio with distance up and down the upright human lung. Whereas ventilation and bloodflow are both lower at the top than the bottom, there is relatively more ventilation than bloodflow at the top and relatively more bloodflow than ventilation at the bottom. As a result, ventilation/perfusion ratios are higher at the top than at the bottom.
position throughout the lung, but the details are more complex because the blood vessels are exposed to alveolar gas pressure. Accordingly, as first described by West and Dollery,10 lung perfusion is functionally described by relationships among three pressures: pulmonary arterial, pulmonary venous, and alveolar. In this way, three functional zones are defined. But from the operational point of view, one sees an essentially linear fall in bloodflow across zones from the bottom to the top of the upright lung. Figure 17-2 shows this classic variation in ventilation, bloodflow, and the ratio between them with vertical distance, drawn from the data of West.9 Figure 17-2 reminds us that the systematic variation in ventilation and bloodflow implies obligate variation in the ratio of ventilation (VA) to bloodflow (Q) with vertical distance, also shown in Figure 17-2. This critical concept is discussed later.
In these two equations, VO2 represents the rate of oxygen uptake, which is equal to the body metabolic rate, VI and VA are, respectively, inspired and expired alveolar ventilation, and FIO2 and FAO2 are, respectively, inspired and expired fractional alveolar oxygen concentrations. Equation 17-1 thus states that the amount of oxygen taken out of respired air per minute is the amount inhaled per minute (VIFIO2) minus the amount exhaled (VAFAO2). Equation 17-2 is very similar but refers to the blood. Thus, Q is total pulmonary bloodflow (essentially equal to cardiac output), and CaO2 and CvO2 are, respectively, the oxygen concentrations in arterial and mixed venous blood. Here, oxygen taken into the blood is the difference between the rate at which oxygen leaves the lungs (Q CaO2) and the rate at which it enters (Q CvO2). Because of the steady-state assumption, the VO2 values in the two equations are identical. Thus, Equations 17-1 and 17-2 can themselves be equated: VIFIO2 VAFAO2 Q CaO2 Q CvO2 (17-3) If we assume for simplicity that VI and VA are numerically identical (and they normally differ by no more than 1%), we
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can replace VI with VA and simplify Equation 17-3 as follows: VA(FIO2 FAO2) VA/Q Q (CaO2 CvO2) (17-4)
It is more usual to convert the fractional concentrations FIO2 and FAO2 to their corresponding partial pressures PIO2 and PAO2 (using Daltons Law of Partial Pressures), which simply involves a proportionality constant that we can call k, such that: VA/Q k(CaO2 CvO2)/(PIO2 PAO2) (17-6)
Exactly the same reasoning leads to a similar equation for carbon dioxide: VA/Q k(CvCO2 CaCO2)/(PACO2 PICO2) (17-7)
Both the numerator and denominator terms are reversed for carbon dioxide, simply reflecting the fact that whereas oxygen moves from air to blood, carbon dioxide moves from blood to air. In addition, PICO2 is so low (air normally contains only 0.03% carbon dioxide) that it can be neglected. Equations 17-6 and 17-7 describe the necessary quantita tive relationships between VA/Q ratio and gas concentrations in the alveolar gas and capillary blood. It is critical to understanding these equations to realize that they contain both independent and dependent variables. Most commonly, we use Equation 17-6 to find, for given values of VA/Q ratio and of mixed venous and inspired oxygen levels (the independent variables), what the alveolar (and hence end-capillary) oxygen levels (the dependent variables) must be to satisfy the equation. The same applies for PACO2 in Equation 17-7. The answer is given in Figure 17-3. Here, the numerical solution to Equation 17-6 is presented for all possible values of VA/Q , using normal values for inspired and mixed venous PO2. The lowest possible VA/Q value is zero, corresponding to a perfused alveolus that has no ventilation (ie, a shunt).
Such a unit exchanges no gas, and so the end-capillary blood leaving that unit has a PO2 equal to that of mixed venous blood (40 Torr in this example). The highest possible VA/Q value is infinite, representing a ventilated alveolus without any bloodflow (called alveolar dead space). This unit also exchanges no gas, and thus the alveolar PO2 equals that of the inspired gas (150 Torr in this case). Between these extremes, there is a smooth relationship where PAO2 increases nonlinearly with increasing VA/Q ratio as shown. A major assumption in solving Equation 17-6 is that the alveolar and end-capillary PO2 values are the same. This implies complete equilibration by diffusion for oxygen across the bloodgas barrier. A justification for this assumption, at least at rest, was provided earlier. Identical assumptions are used for carbon dioxide in solving Equation 17-7. Figure 17-4 shows the solution to Equation 17-7 for carbon dioxide in a manner similar to Figure 17-3 for oxygen. Again, the extremes of VA/Q ratio produce PCO2 values corresponding to that of mixed venous blood when the VA/Q ratio is zero and to that of inspired gas (essentially zero) when the VA/Q ratio is infinite, whereas between there is a smooth relationship, with PCO2 falling as VA/Q is increased. Equations 17-6 and 17-7 are very useful. Under the prevailing major assumptions (steady-state conditions and complete diffusion equilibration), they show that alveolar (and thus end-capillary) PO2 and PCO2 values are deter mined by three interacting factors. These are (1) the VA/Q ratio, (2) the so-called boundary conditionsmixed venous and inspired oxygen and carbon dioxide levels, and (3) the oxygenhemoglobin and carbon dioxide dissociation curves because they determine the relationships between oxygen and carbon dioxide concentrations (numerator of Equations 17-6 and 17-7) and partial pressures (denominator of Equations 17-6 and 17-7). Alterations in any one of these three factors thus have the potential to affect alveolar and hence arterial PO2. Figures 17-3 and 17-4 showed how the first of these three (VA/Q ratio) affects PO2 and PCO2. Figure 17-5 shows how changes in mixed venous PO2 and
160 140 Alveolar PO2 (Torr) 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 Mixed venous PO2 Alveolar PCO2 (Torr) Inspired PO2
50 40 30 20 10 0 0.001
Ventilation/perfusion ratio
Ventilation/perfusion ratio
FIGURE 17-3 Dependence of alveolar PO2 on ventilation/perfusion (VA/Q) ratio. At low VA/Q, alveolar PO2 is close to mixed venous PO2; at high VA/Q , it is close to inspired PO2. Alveolar PO2 is most sensitive to VA/Q in the normal range (VA/Q of about 1).
FIGURE 17-4 Dependence of alveolar PCO2 on ventilation/ perfusion (VA/Q ) ratio. At low VA/Q, alveolar PCO2 is close to mixed venous PCO2; at high VA/Q, it is close to inspired PCO2. Alveolar PO2 is most sensitive to VA/Q in the above-normal range (VA/Q of about 1 to 10).
VentilationPerfusion Relationships
A 160 Alveolar PO2 (Torr) 140 Alveolar PO2 (Torr) 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0.001 Mixed venous PO2:
40 30 20
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Hemoglobin P50:
20 27
0.01
0.1
10
100
Ventilation/perfusion ratio
Ventilation/perfusion ratio
B 160 140 Alveolar PO2 (Torr) 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 Inspired PO2:
150 140 130
FIGURE 17-6 Dependence of alveolar PO2 on hemoglobin P50. As P50 varies, alveolar PO2 changes (at given mixed venous and inspired PO2). Changes in P50 affect alveolar PO2 mostly in the normal range of VA/Q , around 1.
Ventilation/perfusion ratio
FIGURE 17-5 Relationship of alveolar PO2 to VA/Q depends on both mixed venous PO2 (A) and inspired PO2 (B). In particular, PO2 in areas of low VA/Q reflects mixed venous PO2, whereas areas of high VA/Q reflect inspired PO2.
inspired PO2 affect PO2. A fall in mixed venous PO2 reduces alveolar PO2 in all alveoli, but much more so in alveoli whose VA/Q ratio is low. Such units have their PO2 tied to that of mixed venous blood, as shown. Correspondingly, a fall in inspired PO2 also reduces alveolar PO2, but more so when VA/Q ratio is high. The curve for carbon dioxide behaves correspondingly when venous or inspired PCO2 is changed. Figure 17-6 shows how changes in the PO2 corresponding to hemoglobin oxygen saturation of 50% (P50) affect alveolar PO2 when mixed venous and inspired PO2 are maintained at normal values. Thus, a fall in P50 leads to a higher alveolar PO2 at any VA/Q ratio, and vice versa. The effects are clearly greatest in the normal range of VA/Q and are negligible when VA/Q is either very low or very high. Solving Equations 17-6 and 17-7 by hand or graphically, as done originally,14 is very laborious, due mostly to the nonlinear and interdependent nature of the oxygen and carbon dioxide dissociation curves. Today, these equations are easily solved by computer, and the necessary algorithms are well established15,16 and available.
When considering Equation 17-8, recall that the lung remains the servant of the body, such that the body, not the lung, sets VO2 as an independent variable in the current context. Likewise, PIO2 is set by the environmental condi tions, and VA is determined by the integrated respiratory control system and mechanical properties of the lungs and chest wall. Thus, the single dependent variable is alveolar PO2 (PAO2). What Equation 17-8 tells us is as follows: given the VO2, PIO2, and amount of alveolar ventilation (VA), the alveolar PO2 takes a unique, dependent value that must satisfy Equation 17-8. These are the only determinants of alveolar PO2 in a homogeneous lung. Let us now proceed to Equation 17-9. The same value of VO2 must exist as for Equation 17-8. Total pulmonary bloodflow will also be determined, like ventilation, by complex
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control systems external to the lungs. Given that alveolar and end-capillary (here arterial) PO2 are equal in this homogeneous lung, arterial oxygen concentration (CaO2) must be that value read off the oxygenhemoglobin dissociation curve for the value of alveolar PO2 determined from Equation 17-8. Hence, the remaining unknown, mixed venous oxygen concentration must be that value that satisfies Equation 17-9. In sum, Equation 17-8 shows that it is only metabolic rate, ventilation, and inspired PO2 that together influence arterial PO2 when the lungs are completely homogeneous. Cardiac output does not influence arterial PO2 under such circumstances but does affect mixed venous PO2. Again, these conclusions pertain only to steady-state conditions and when there is complete diffusion equilibration across the bloodgas barrier. Although this is strictly true only for a homogeneous lung, these conclusions are also approximately correct for the normal human lung, as discussed above. When this approach is taken, and as can be inferred from Figures 17-3 and 17-4, we can see that normal arterial PO2 is about 100 Torr, and arterial PCO2 is about 40 Torr. This is based on (1) alveolar ventilation at 5 to 6 L /min and cardiac output at 5 to 6 L /min, such that overall VA/Q ratio is close to 1, and (2) a metabolic rate resulting in a VO2 of 300 mL /min and a VCO2 of 240 mL /min.
from the homogeneous lung and then use the above equations to determine how a two-compartment model with a defined degree of VA/Q mismatch affects gas exchange. What will be found is that VA/Q inequality causes hypoxemia, hypercapnia, and reductions in the rates of both oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide elimination. Such a result is not compatible with life in the long term because the lung cannot supply enough oxygen for the metabolic needs of the body or keep up with the associated rate of carbon dioxide elimination. Usually, the body employs one or more compensatory mechanisms (discussed below), which can return VO2 and VCO2 to levels matching the tissue metabolic rate. However, sometimes this does not happen. And, occasionally, the degree of inequality may be too severe for available compensatory mechanisms to cope with. In either case, death will ensue. I will begin with a homogeneous lung, using values for the variables that correspond to those of a typical normal resting adult breathing air at sea level. I will stipulate the following independent variables: FIO2 0.21; FICO2 0; barometric pressure 760 Torr; VO2 300 mL /min; VCO2 240 mL/min; alveolar ventilation 5.2 L /min; cardiac output 6.0 L /min. Additional secondary information required includes hemoglobin concentration (taken to be normal, 15 g/dL), hemoglobin P50 (normal at 27 Torr), and acidbase status, which will also be taken to be normal. That is, there is no metabolic acidosis or alkalosis. Applying first Equations 17-1 and 17-2 for oxygen and using the corresponding approach simultaneously for car bon dioxide, we find that, for the given VA/Q ratio of 5.2/6.0, or 0.87, PAO2 100 Torr and PACO2 40 Torr. This is compatible with Figures 17-3 and 17-4. Mixed venous PO2 is about 40 Torr, and mixed venous PCO2 is 46 Torr. These unique values (here rounded to the nearest integer) fit the equations and allow for the requisite VO2 and VCO2 specified above. Figure 17-7 shows these results in diagrammatic form, where the lung is drawn as two alveoli that are equally perfused and equally ventilated. Thus, although two alve oli are drawn, they have the same VA/Q ratio, and thus the system is really a homogeneous lung. The trachea is represented by the single vertical line at the top of the figure. It divides into two bronchi that connect the trachea to the two circular alveoli. Beneath each alveolus is its vasculature, drawn as a curved vessel on each side that touches its alveolus, forming the bloodgas barrier at the points of contact. Blood flows from the outside inwards for each alveolus, and the two blood vessels join at the foot of the figure to form the left atrial and hence systemic arterial bloodstreams. Suppose we now suddenly create severe airway obstruction in the bronchus of the left-hand alveolus. This could, in fact, happen, for example, from inhalation of a foreign body into a main bronchus, and is depicted in Figure 17-8. If we analyze the effects of this inequality, assuming first that the mixed venous blood oxygen and carbon dioxide levels remain normal, the results are as shown in Figure 17-8A. The large black dot indicates the obstruction, which has reduced ventilation on the left side from 2.6 to just
VentilationPerfusion Relationships
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Normal lungs
Ventilation L/min 2.6 2.6
PAO2 PACO2
100 40
100 40
3.0 0.9
3.0 0.9
FIGURE 17-7 Gas exchange function in a homogeneous lung that is normally perfused and ventilated. Arterial PO2 and PCO2 are 100 and 40 Torr, respectively, and the lung is able to take up the normal amount of oxygen (300 mL /min) and eliminate the normal amount of carbon dioxide (240 mL /min). These results all come from solving the mass conservation equations (Equations 17-1 and 17-2 for oxygen and the corresponding equations for carbon dioxide).
0.3 L /min. As a result, the rest of the ventilation is diverted to the right side, keeping total ventilation constant. In reality, both ventilation and mixed venous gas levels would change, as too may cardiac output, and these changes are discussed below. However, to understand the effects of VA/Q inequality on gas exchange, we will first assume no changes in any of these variables. The redistribution of ventilation gives rise to two differ ent VA/Q ratios, as Figure 17-8 shows: 0.1 on the left and 1.6 on the right. Since overall ventilation and bloodflow are unchanged, the overall VA/Q ratio remains at 5.2/6.0, or 0.87. Note that the VA/Q ratio of the left side is lower, and that of the right side is higher, than this overall value. At first sight, one might think that, for this reason, the two would offset one another, and overall gas exchange would be unaffected. This is not the case, as the following analysis demonstrates. When Equations 17-1 and 17-2 are applied separately to both alveoli, the resulting alveolar PO2 values are, as shown, 47 and 119 Torr (see Figure 17-3). Similar calculations for carbon dioxide reveal that alveolar PCO2 values are 46 and 35 Torr, respectively (see Figure 17-4). The bloodflow remains equally distributed between the alveoli (3 L /min each), and so the mixed arterial blood is a 50:50 mixture of the bloodstreams from the two alveoli. Because the oxygen dissociation curve is so nonlinear, this mixture does not produce a PO2 halfway between the two alveolar PO2 values of 47 and 119 (which would be 83) but gives rise to a much lower PO2, 58 Torr. Similar calculations for carbon dioxide give a rather different result: because the carbon dioxide dissociation curve is nearly linear, the PCO2 of mixed arterial blood is essentially the average of the two alveolar PCO2 values, at 41 Torr. Although this is a small absolute increase from normal (of only about 1 Torr), even a 1-Torr increase is a significant percentage (about 20%) of the mixed venousarterial PCO2
difference, suggesting that carbon dioxide elimination is indeed compromised, even though the change in arterial PCO2 seems trivial. Thus, in this particular model, where the primary lesion corresponds to areas of greatly reduced VA/Q ratio, the effects on arterial PO2 are shown to be far greater than those on arterial PCO2. These results also imply that total oxygen uptake must have been reduced (same mixed venous PO2 but lower than normal arterial PO2), and Figure 17-8A indicates this, with VO2 falling from its normal value of 300 mL /min (Figure 17-7) to 200 mL /min, a 33% reduction. There is also a reduction in carbon dioxide elimination as implied above, from 240 mL /min in the normal lung to 210 mL /min here, but the interference is less than for oxygen, a reduction of only 13%. The next step in the analysis is to determine the effect of this hypoxic and (slightly) hypercapnic blood on oxygen transport to (and carbon dioxide transport from) the peripheral tissues. Since tissue metabolic rate continues unchanged, the tissues will attempt to extract sufficient oxygen from the blood for their metabolic needs. Extracting the same amount of oxygen from arterial blood with a lower PO2 must result in a fall in venous PO2 draining the tissues. This must cause a fall in mixed venous PO2 in the pulmonary artery. Returning to Figure 17-5A, it becomes clear that this fall in mixed venous PO2 must reduce alveolar PO2, especially in the low-VA/Q alveolus, which will further lower systemic arterial PO2 as well. However, this strategy does enable restoration of VO2 to normal. Figure 17-8B shows the result of this process, and it can be seen that VO2 is indeed restored to 300 mL /min, but the penalty is a fall in both mixed venous and arterial PO2 (to 33 and 48 Torr, respectively). In a similar manner, because arterial PCO2 was increased by VA/Q inequality, adding all the metabolically produced carbon dioxide to tissue blood raises mixed venous PCO2, which will lead to a further increase in arterial PCO2. Arterial PCO2 is now 45 Torr, up from 41 Torr. However, as for oxygen, the lungs are again able to eliminate all of the carbon dioxide produced (240 mL /min). Figure 17-8B shows this as well. We thus have what at first sight appears to be a paradox: overall lung function (ie, VO2 and VCO2) has been restored, but the hypoxemia and hypercapnia are both worse than before the changes in venous PO2 and PCO2 that allowed VO2 and VCO2 to be normalized. Actually, this is typical of other functional systems in the body and is not a paradox. For example, in stable chronic renal failure, the total amount of urea excreted in the urine per unit time exactly matches tissue urea production, but this can happen only in the case of a higher than normal blood urea level when some nephrons are diseased and functionally compromised. To this point, the body tissues have been protected (VO2 and VCO2 normalized), but hypoxemia and hypercapnia are both significant. The next likely response is therefore an increase in ventilation resulting from chemoreceptor activation in response to the low PO2 and high PCO2. Figure 17-8C shows that if the normal (right-hand) alveolus has its ventilation increased by just 0.6 L /min (ie, by just 12%), arterial PCO2 is returned to the normal value of 40 Torr, even if the
174
Ventilation L/min
0.3
4.9
Ventilation L/min
0.3
4.9
PAO2 PACO2
47 46
119 35
PAO2 PACO2
37 51
105 40
3.0 0.1
3.0 1.6
3.0 0.1
3.0 1.6
Ventilation L/min
0.3
5.5
Ventilation L/min
0.3
7.7
PAO2 PACO2
36 46
110 35
PAO2 PACO2
34 35
121 26
3.0 0.1
3.0 1.8
3.0 0.1
3.0 2.6
FIGURE 17-8 Effect on gas exchange of severe unilateral airway obstruction causing inequality of ventilation distribution. A, Without change in total ventilation, bloodflow, or inspired/mixed venous composition, there is moderate hypoxemia, slight hypercapnia, and diminished oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide elimination. B, There will be an immediate fall in mixed venous PO2 and rise in PCO2. This allows normalization of VO2 and VCO2, but at a cost of further hypoxemia and hypercapnia. C, Hypercapnia and hypoxemia will stimulate respiration, normalizing arterial PCO2. Hypoxemia is not corrected, however. D, With arterial PO2 still low after ventilation has increased, there may be a further increase in ventilation, now leading to hypocapnia but still not alleviating hypoxemia.
obstruction on the left side is unaltered. This is a trivial increase in ventilation, and thus in respiratory effort, and normally will take place rapidly. However, note that this increase in ventilation has no significant effect on arterial PO2, as Figure 17-8 indicates. Improving alveolar PO2 on the right side increases oxygen concentration in the blood negligibly because the oxygen dissociation curve is flat in this region. PO2 on the left side is essentially unchanged because there has been no relief of the airway obstruction. Thus, there is little effect on arterial PO2. In fact, PO2 in this example has actually fallen (even if by only 1 Torr), despite the increase in ventilation. This is explained by the Bohr effect of carbon dioxide on the oxygen dissociation curve. In this particular model, further increases in ventilation on the right side are futile. Even reducing arterial PCO2 to 30 Torr by increasing ventilation on the right side to 7.7 L /min (Figure 17-8D) fails to improve arterial PO2. The patient can survive the obstruction in terms of overall gas exchange and
can overcome the initial hypercapnia quite easily. However, hypoxemia remains severe and refractory to increases in ventilation. It is very instructive to contrast the behavior of this particular model (severe airway obstruction) with its symmetric counterpart of severe vascular obstruction, as might occur as a result of pulmonary thromboembolism. Figure 17-9 shows such a two-compartment model, with the same overall ventilation and cardiac output as in the normal lung. In this case, bloodflow on the left-hand side is impaired, essentially as severely as was ventilation in the prior model of airway obstruction (see Figure 17-8). We can apply exactly the same principles to calculate how oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange will be affected, using the relationships in Figures 17-3 and 17-4 and the particular values for VA/Q shown in Figure 17-9A. At this point, the assumption of unchanged mixed venous PO2 and PCO2 will again be made, as in Figure 17-8A. Note again that in this example,
VentilationPerfusion Relationships
A B
175
Ventilation L/min
2.6
2.6
Ventilation L/min
2.6
2.6
PAO2 PACO2
141 17
74 44
PAO2 PACO2
139 21
62 59
0.3 8.5
5.7 0.5
0.3 8.5
5.7 0.5
Ventilation L/min
3.7
3.7
Ventilation L/min
5.0
5.0
PAO2 PACO2
143 14
88 42
PAO2 PACO2
145 10
104 32
Perfusion L/min
0.3
?.7 0.7
0.3 16.7
5.7 0.9
FIGURE 17-9 Effect on gas exchange of severe unilateral vascular obstruction causing inequality of bloodflow distribution. A, Without change in total ventilation, bloodflow, or inspired/mixed venous composition, there is mild hypoxemia, slightly more hypercapnia than in the airway obstruction model, and diminished oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide elimination. In this model, the effects on carbon dioxide are more prominent than for airway obstruction. B, As in Figure 17-8, there will be an immediate fall in mixed venous PO2 and a rise in PCO2. This normalizes VO2 and VCO2, but at the cost of further hypoxemia and, especially, hypercapnia. C, Hypercapnia (in particular) and hypoxemia will stimulate respiration, which normalizes arterial PCO2. Hypoxemia is essentially corrected. D, Any further increase in ventilation, were it to occur, would be able to raise arterial PO2 above normal.
one side has a VA/Q ratio lower than normal, and the other A/Q ratio higher than normaljust as for the airway has a V obstruction model. The different values result in different numbers, and in this case, whereas arterial PO2 has been less affected than in the case of airway obstruction, arterial PCO2 has increased twice as much as in the prior modelby 2 Torr. VO2 has fallen from 300 mL /min to 260 mL /min, a reduction of only 13%, whereas VCO2 has fallen from 240 to 180 mL /min, or by 25%. Thus, carbon dioxide has been affected more than oxygen in this analog of pulmonary embolism. As with the prior model, the tissues will extract the necessary oxygen from the venous blood and add all of the carbon dioxide produced, causing venous PO2 to fall and PCO2 to rise. As before, this will cause arterial PO2 to fall further and PCO2 to rise further, but this will again allow normal ization of VO2 and VCO2, as shown in Figure 17-9B. Note here that arterial hypercapnia is severe, whereas hypoxemia
is relatively mild, consistent with the greater effects of such a VA/Q pattern on carbon dioxide than on oxygen. Stimulation of the chemoreceptors will thus occur and lead to an increase in ventilation. Figure 17-9C shows that a small increase in ventilation of just over 2 L /min (from 5.2 to 7.4 L /min) will suffice to completely normalize arterial PCO2. In stark contrast to the airway obstruction model, in which half the lung (in terms of bloodflow) could not be ventilated and was very hypoxic, almost all of the lung (again in terms of bloodflow) is well ventilated. Thus, arterial PO2 is essentially normalized (to 89 Torr) by this modest level of increased ventilation. In fact, a small further increase in ventilation to just 10 L /min would produce an above-normal arterial PO2 of over 100 Torr (Figure 17-9D), along with an arterial PCO2 of 30 Torr. These two models illustrate the spectrum of gas exchange disturbances. They show that, based on straightforward principles of mass balance, it is possible to understand how
176
VA/Q inequality affects the ability of the lungs to exchange the required amounts of oxygen and carbon dioxide and the penalties that must be paid in terms of arterial blood gas aberrations to achieve this. They also illustrate the important concept that the degree to which oxygen and carbon dioxide are differently affected by VA/Q inequality depends on the pattern of that inequality.
therapeutically altered. It represents an attempt to control for the expected changes in arterial PO2 when FIO2 is changed, so that the lungs can be compared irrespective of FIO2. The physiologic basis of this is reasonable under some but not all conditions, as Figure 17-10 shows. Figure 17-10A shows arterial PO2 itself as a function of FIO2, over the range from air (FIO2 0.21) to pure oxygen (FIO2 1.0) in three theoretical models of the lung. They reflect a normal lung, a lung containing a 20% shunt but no VA/Q inequality, and a lung with severe VA/Q inequality but no shunt. Arterial PO2 changes with FIO2 substantially in all three examples, but at different rates. Figure 17-10 shows the same arterial PO2 values now divided by FIO2. The normal lung and the lung with only a shunt show quite different ratios that are roughly constant
AND THE
The simplest parameters of gas exchange are the arterial PO2 and PCO2 themselves. Normal values have been established by sampling arterial blood from large numbers of normal subjects.1921 The results are consistent with all of the above theory. Arterial PO2 is normally greater than 90 Torr (at sea level), and arterial PCO2 is normally 40 Torr (also at sea level). There is variability in both PO2 and PCO2. This is due to both biologic and instrumental variance. A common cause of biologic variance is hyperventilation during the sampling procedure as a result of the anxiety-provoking arterial puncture itself. Reasonable values for total variance with well-functioning blood gas electrodes are about 3 to 5 Torr (1 SD) for PO2 and 1 to 2 Torr for PCO2. Both arterial PO2 and PCO2 fall with altitude,22 due to the reduction in inspired PO2 and its concomitant effect of increasing ventilation. Thus, the altitude at which blood is sampled is important for interpretation of the data. Another factor is age since PO2 falls gradually (if slightly) with age. The changes in healthy nonsmokers are small, and octogenarians typically have a PO2 in the range of 80 to 85 Torr.1921 PCO2, on the other hand, appears to remain constant with age. Measuring arterial PO2 and PCO2 is simple and is very commonly done, but these variables represent the entire inte grated result of all gas exchange processes in the lung (VA/Q relationships, shunting, diffusion limitation) and the abovementioned compensatory responses in mixed venous blood, in ventilation, and in cardiac output. Thus, the information obtained, although clinically very useful, is limited in terms of the insights provided into the alterations in physiology. In situations where inspired oxygen levels may vary, such as in the intensive care unit, an extensively used alternative to the direct use of arterial PO2 is the ratio of arterial to inspired PO2 (or arterial PO2 to FIO2). This ratio is intended to allow comparisons of arterial PO2 even as FIO2 is
B 800 700 PaO2 / FIO2 ratio 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0.0 0.2 0.4
20% shunt
0.6 F IO 2
0.8
1.0
FIGURE 17-10 Response of arterial PO2 (A) and the ratio of arterial PO2 to FIO2 (B) to increases in FIO2 in three different lungs. Closed circles indicate a normal lung, triangles indicate a lung with a 20% shunt but no VA/Q inequality, and open circles indicate a lung with severe VA/Q inequality but no shunt.The normal lung and the lung with a pure shunt show essentially constant but very different PaO2/FIO2 ratios, providing a rationale for the use of this ratio in assessing gas exchange when FIO2 is subject to change (as in critically ill patients). However, the response in the third lung, which has VA/Q inequality rather than shunt, is very different. This lung looks like the lung with a shunt at lower FIO2 but like the normal lung at high FIO2. This points out the limitations in the use of this ratio.
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over a wide FIO2 range. Certainly, the mean values of about 600 (normal) and 200 (20% shunt) are very different, and the variability, especially above an FIO2 of 0.3 to 0.4, is modest. The problem with the PaO2/FIO2 ratio is seen in lungs with VA/Q inequality but no shunt, where between room air and 40% inspired oxygen, the PaO2/FIO2 ratio is about 200, similar to that of the lung with a 20% shunt. However, at high FIO2 values, the PaO2/FIO2 ratio rises rapidly and is not different from normal above about 90% inspired oxygen. Consequently, the PaO2/FIO2 ratio must be used with care when significant VA/Q inequality is present.
The corresponding equation for carbon dioxide, assuming no significant carbon dioxide in inspired gas, is: VCO2 VAFACO2 kVA(PACO2) (17-10)
If normal values for all of the variables are inserted into Equation 17-14, we can calculate that the additional term in Equation 17-14 is very small, usually about 2 Torr. For clinical purposes, it can be neglected, and the simpler form, Equation 17-13, is used. For research purposes, however, Equation 17-14 is preferred. Three important limitations should be kept in mind when using either form of the alveolar gas equation. The first is that the equation applies only when gas exchange is in a steady state. The second is that R needs to be known if PAaO2 is to be accurate. Measuring R in clinical circum stances is uncommon. It is found by determining VO2 and VCO2 from analysis of expired gas. Under most circumstances, assuming R 0.85 is reasonable. The third limitation is that alveolar PCO2 (PACO2 in Equations 17-13 and 17-14) is taken to be the same as arterial PCO2. This is reasonable under many conditions, especially when areas of low, but not high, VA/Q ratio are prominent. However, when high VA/Q ratio regions are significant, alveolar PCO2 can be considerably lower than arterial PCO2, causing an underestimation of PAaO2. The two examples discussed above in the two-compartment analysis of VA/Q inequality are consistent with this conclusion. PAaO2 is thus a compromise parameter, balancing simplicity against both limitations resulting from the required assumptions and the depth of information revealed. Hypoventilation (or hyperventilation) alone will not increase PAaO2, but whether an abnormal PAaO2 is caused by VA/Q inequality, shunting, or diffusion limitation alone or in combination cannot be determined. Normally, PAaO2 is 5 to 10 Torr in young healthy subjects. Because it is the difference between two large numbers (alveolar PO2, about 100 Torr, and arterial PO2, about 90 to 95 Torr), the variance in PAaO2 resulting from measurement errors is quite large. Negative values are not uncommonly found but should not be considered intrinsically problematic because of the large variance.
If we now simply divide Equation 17-10 by Equation 17-8 and define the ratio of carbon dioxide eliminated (VCO2) to 2) as the respiratory exchange ratio, R, oxygen taken up (VO we have: R PACO2/(PIO2 PAO2) PIO2 PACO2/R (17-11)
PAaO2 is now just the difference between PAO2 from Equation 17-12 and arterial PO2 (PaO2): PAaO2 PIO2 PACO2/R PaO2 (17-13) This is called the alveolar gas equation. Because we used the approximation that VI VA in developing Equation 17-8, Equation 17-13 is also based on that assumption. We can take account of the fact that, in general, VI and VA are slightly different. When this is done, Equation 17-13 becomes: PAaO2 PIO2 PACO2/R PaO2 PACO2FIO2(1 R)/R (17-14)
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Riley three-compartment model is thus really a pair of two-compartment models in which the normal compartment is shared. The bloodflow fraction in the shunt compartment is called physiologic shunt (or, equivalently, venous admixture), and the ventilation fraction in the dead space is called physiologic dead space (or, equivalently, wasted ventilation). The calculations of physiologic shunt and dead space are based on mass conservation principles (as was all of the preceding discussion on gas exchange), as follows. Arterial oxygen concentration, CaO2, must be the bloodflow-weighted average of the concentrations of oxygen in the normal (called ideal, i) alveolus, CiO2, and that of mixed venous blood passing through the shunt, CvO2, as follows, where S is fractional perfusion in the shunt compartment: CaO2 (1 S)CiO2 SCvO2 (17-15)
If arterial and mixed venous oxygen levels are measured, and CiO2 is calculated from the oxygen dissociation curve with knowledge of PiO2 (the PO2 of the normal alveolus calculated using the alveolar gas equation), S can be computed by rearranging Equation 17-15: S (CiO2 CaO2)/(CiO2 CvO2) (17-16)
In normal lungs, S should be very close to zero and not more than 0.01 to 0.02. This is because there are essentially no unventilated alveoli in normal lungs. Thus, any value greater than about 0.02 would be interpreted as abnormal. There is a very important limitation to the use of Equation 17-16. It explicitly requires knowledge of the mixed venous oxygen concentration. As the preceding dis cussion of two-compartment models of VA/Q inequality has shown, mixed venous PO2 can vary considerably, so that assuming any particular value may be problematic. Thus, unless CvO2 is measured, S may contain substantial errors. From principles similar to those underlying calculation of physiologic shunt, mixed expired PCO2 (PexpCO2) must be the weighted average of the PCO2 in the normal (ideal) alveolus (PiCO2) and zero (which is the PCO2 of the ventilated but unperfused, dead space alveolus; see Figure 17-3). If VD is the fraction of the total ventilation in the dead-space alveolus, we have: PexpCO2 VD (VD 0) (1 VD)PiCO2 (17-17)
expirate contains gas that filled the conducting airways at the end of inspirationthat is, inspired gas, normally devoid of carbon dioxide. Thus, the normal value of VD is about 0.3 because conducting airway volume is about 30% of the total tidal volume under normal conditions. An increase above 0.3 therefore marks abnormal exchange. This warning sign requires further consideration because the normal value of VD can vary greatly as tidal volume varies. Thus, with a constant conducting airway volume of 150 mL, a fall in tidal volume from 500 to 300 mL /breath would increase VD from 0.3 to 0.5. Thus, in applying Equation 17-19, it is critical to know actual tidal volume. We can assume that conducting airway volume is about 1 mL per pound of body weight (in a nonobese patient). Once tidal volume is known, the fraction of VD that should be attributable to conducting airway volume can be easily computed, and what is left is then the measure of the ventilation of unperfused alveoli. In applying both Equation 17-16 for physiologic shunt and Equation 17-19 for physiologic dead space, the lungs have been modeled by Riley as a three-compartment structure. This is a gross oversimplication in many if not most cases. Of course, if there actually is only a true shunt present (as, for example, in atelectasis, or via a right-to-left intracardiac shunt), the calculated physiologic shunt will be accurate. The same holds true for physiologic dead space it will be accurate if the actual situation is one of completely unperfused alveoli. However, in most patients, there is a dis tribution of VA/Q ratios presentlow but greater than zero and/or high but less than infinite. In such circumstances, S from Equation 17-16 and VD from Equation 17-19 will systematically underestimate the fractions of bloodflow and ventilation (respectively) associated with these low- and high-VA/Q regions. Nevertheless, these are very useful indices of abnormal gas exchange that have withstood the tests of time. They represent the equivalent fractional shunt and dead space necessary to explain arterial and expired gas concentrations and as such are useful measures of the degree of pulmonary abnormality.
DISTRIBUTION
OF
VENTILATION/PERFUSION RATIOS
As with the alveolar gas equation above, it is common practice to assume that the ideal PCO2 is equal to the arterial value (PaCO2), such that Equation 17-18 now becomes: VD (PaCO2 PexpCO2)/PaCO2 (17-19) In Equation 17-19, VD is often called VD/VT or deadspace/tidal volume ratio. Note that to measure mixed expired PCO2, we must collect several entire exhalations and measure mean PCO2 in that mixed, exhaled gas. The conducting airways will clearly contribute to the dilution of carbon dioxide in mixed expired gas because the mixed
Theoretical Basis The limitations of the PAaO2, the PaO2/FIO2 ratio, and the Riley three-compartment model discussed above have led workers to search for better methods for assessing gas exchange. Just as Riley and Cournand used measurements of arterial and expired oxygen and carbon dioxide levels to determine parameters of simple threecompartment models of ventilation and bloodflow, it has been shown that measurements of arterial and expired levels of foreign inert gases can also be used to determine parameters of the ventilation/perfusion ratio distribution. The principles of such inert gas methods are identical to those used by Riley and Cournand, but by simultaneously exposing the lungs to a mixture of many inert gases, one can go from simple three-compartment models to a smooth approximation of the entire VA/Q distribution. The difference between Rileys three-compartment model and the VA/Q distribution derived from inert gases is essentially only quantitative; the basis is the same. Riley used oxygen to determine the division of bloodflow between two
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179
compartments and carbon dioxide to divide ventilation between two compartments. Using a mixture of several inert gases allows one to divide both ventilation and bloodflow among the entire possible spectrum of VA/Q units. The only other differences are that (1) changes in the levels of FIO2, total ventilation, and cardiac output affect the parameters obtained in the Riley analysis for the same actual VA/Q distribution, and (2) the level of oxygen (and possibly also of carbon dioxide) can affect how ventilation and bloodflow are distributed, thus making the three-compartment model sensitive to values of the variables used to measure it. If inert gases are applied at trace (parts per million) levels, they do not affect the distribution and thus provide a more reliable picture of VA/Q relationships. To understand inert gas methods, one needs to understand the objective of using them: to describe the way in which VA/Q ratios are distributed within the lung. The image is one of a lung that consists of a spectrum of gas exchange units, each of which is a homogeneous unit with a particu lar VA/Q ratio. These particular VA/Q ratios are selected objectively to adequately represent the whole possible VA/Q range (from zero to infinity), just as in a human population survey only a small fraction of the actual population is used to represent the whole population. The question then becomes how bloodflow (and, separately, how ventilation) is distributed among these many VA/Q units. An analogy would be the distribution of weight / height ratios in a group of people. One would take the members of the group and measure their weight and height. One would then aggregate members into small weight / height ranges (such as 30 to 32 kg/m or 32 to 34 kg/m) and plot the number of members in each such range (y-axis) against weight / height group ratio midpoint on the x-axis. With a large enough number of subjects, one would probably end up with a smooth, bell-shaped curve, with most subjects near the mean and the numbers decreasing on either side with increasing distance from the mean. This kind of plot is called a frequency distribution and is the most succinct and complete description of the population of height / weight ratios. To apply this to the lung, we need such frequency distributions: one for ventilation and the other for bloodflow. Figure 17-11A illustrates the principle. Two curves are shown for a hypothetical VA/Q distribution, one for how ventilation is distributed among units of varying VA/Q ratio and the other for bloodflow. The x-axis depicts the VA/Q ratio, which in this example runs from 0.001 to 1,000. Note that units with VA/Q of zero [a shunt: perfused (Q 0) but not ventilated (VA 0)] are absent in this case; units with an infinite VA/Q ratio [dead space: ventilated (VA 0) but unperfused (Q 0)] are also not present. However, both shunt and dead space could be placed on Figure 17-11A, were they present. Figure 17-11A indicates the pattern of ventilation and bloodflow across the range of VA/Q ratios, and the key point is that real lungs will have units with any or all VA/Q ratios in between the extremes, as shown by the curves. A special feature of the VA/Q distribution is that because the VA/Q ratio is defined as the ratio of ventilation to bloodflow, any points on the ventilation and bloodflow
FIGURE 17-11 Concept of the distribution of ventilation/perfusion ratios. A shows a continuous distribution of both ventilation and bloodflow. It succinctly describes the relative amounts of ventila tion and bloodflow associated with lung regions of different VA/Q ratio from 0.001 to 1,000. This is the information necessary to explain how well or poorly the lung exchanges oxygen and carbon dioxide. B shows the Riley three-compartment equivalent of this particular distribution and indicates how this model, although clinically useful, greatly oversimplifies the actual situation.
curves at the same x-axis value of VA/Q are numerically related: VA QVA/Q (17-20)
Thus, if we know the bloodflow distribution (Q vs. VA/Q ), we also know the ventilation distribution (VA vs. VA/Q ), and vice versa. In Figure 17-11B, the Riley three-compartment model obtained from the same distribution shown in Figure 17-11A is projected onto this platform. Figure 17-11B shows three virtual compartments with VA/Q ratios of 0, the ideal value (about 1.2 in this case), and infinity, with the bloodflow split between the first two and the ventilation split between the latter two. Physiologic shunt and dead space are each a little less than 2 L /min. It is evident how the Riley model, although clinically useful, greatly oversimplifies the actual lungs by representing a broad distribution as a threecompartment equivalent.
180
Figure 17-11A depicts ventilation and bloodflow, respec tively, at a series of 20 equally spaced VA/Q ratios (equally spaced on a logarithmic scale, which is more useful than a linear scale for a distribution of ratios). Using a discrete set of VA/Q ratios (be it 20 or 50 or some other number) is a very convenient way to describe the distribution and turns out to be both simpler and more flexible than trying to work with a truly continuous mathematical function. What is key is to select the VA/Q ratios evenly across the VA/Q scale, as has been done in Figure 17-11A. Based on this concept of the VA/Q distribution, we can now proceed to examine the behavior of a single inert gas in any one of the VA/Q compartments and then in the distribution as a whole, as in Figure 17-11A. Going back to Equations 17-1 and 17-2, which described mass conservation for the uptake of oxygen by the lungs, we can apply the same principles to an inert gas of solubility . Since inert gases obey Henrys law, the concentration in blood (Cig) is directly proportional to partial pressure (Pig): Cig Pig (17-21) The constant of proportionality is the solubility, , and since inert gases equilibrate very rapidly across the bloodgas barrier, alveolar (PAig) and end-capillary (Pcig) inert gas partial pressures are identical. Equations 17-1 and 17-2 then become: Vig and Vig Q (Ccig Cvig) Q (PAig Pvig) (17-23) VIPIig VAPAig (17-22)
and wished to use the retention data to construct the VA/Q distribution. We could set up a lung having six predeter mined (ie, known) VA/Q ratios (equally spaced across the VA/Q range in Figure 17-11A). The task would be to determine how total pulmonary bloodflow is distributed among the six compartments. We apply the same mass conservation logic as for physiologic shunt (Equation 17-15). That logic means that, for any one inert gas, its retention fraction measured in mixed systemic arterial blood must be a bloodflowweighted average of the six compartmental retentions. If R Pc/Pv, we can write for any one gas: Rj (retention in VA/Q compartment j) Then, systemic arterial R would be: R Q 1R1 Q 2R2 Q 3R3 Q 4R4 Q 5R5 Q 6R6 (17-27) /( VA/Q j) (17-26)
The inert gases are presented to the lungs dissolved in saline or dextrose by way of constant intravenous infusion. In this way, they are being eliminated by the lungs, just as for carbon dioxide. PIig is therefore zero by design, simplifying the equations. Equating Equations 17-22 and 17-23 and dropping the subscript ig for simplicity, we have: VAPA PA/Pv Q (Pv /( PA) VA/Q ) (17-24) Isolating PA and dividing by both Q and Pv yields: Pc/Pv (17-25) The units for are such that it becomes what is called the blood/gas partition coefficient of the gas. The partition coefficient is the ratio of the equilibrium concentrations of the inert gas in the blood and gas phases and describes the solubility of the gas in blood. Remember that PA is alveolar, Pc is end-capillary, and Pv is mixed venous partial pressure of the inert gas. Equation 17-25 is very useful. The ratio Pc /Pv for a gas being eliminated by the lungs is its fractional retention. Thus, if 100 molecules were infused and 80 were eliminated by ventilation, retention would be 0.2 (or 20%). Equation 17-25 shows that retention is a simple function of only the partition coefficient and the VA/Q ratio. Retention falls with increasing VA/Q ratio for a given value of ; it also falls as is reduced for a given value of VA/Q. This equation can be applied to each VA/Q ratio unit in the entire VA/Q distribution. Suppose that we simultaneously infused six inert gases
Here the six values of Q j are fractional bloodflow values that sum to 1.0. It is these values that are unknown and that we need to determine, given the measured value of R and the calculated values of all Rj. If six different gases were simultaneously infused and their systemic arterial retentions (R values on the left side of Equation 17-27) were measured, each of the six gases would generate one equation similar to Equation 17-27. In each of these six equations, we already know as the measured partition coefficient and have spec ified the six values of VA/Q. Thus, each value of Rj for each gas can be calculated. What we now have is a set of six simultaneous linear equations in six unknownsthe six compartmental bloodflow fractions. Such an equation system is easily and uniquely solvedthere is only one set of six values of fractional Q that satisfies all six equations. It is no accident that in this example there is the same number of gases as VA/Q compartments. That is required for a conventional solution to such a set of equations. We now can plot the paired values of bloodflow and VA/Q ratio compartment by compartment, as in Figure 17-11A, and we have found the distribution of VA/Q ratios, at least as a six-compartment model. This process has been described to give a feel for the basic principles. However, there are three major limitations to the use in practice of such a simple system: 1. In being limited to the same number of VA/Q compartments as we have gases, six in this example, we may have a too coarse sampling of the VA/Q axis to properly fit the results. Six gases are about all that can be measured simultaneously in a reasonable time frame. Modeling research has shown that the VA/Q domain needs to be divided into at least 20 compartments (plus shunt and dead space) to overcome this limitation in practice. It would be infeasible in practice to expose the lungs to 20 different gases to enable a 20-compartment analysis. There is no guarantee that the six compartments will end up having positive values for bloodflow when the equations are solved. However, negative bloodflow has no physiologic meaning, and therefore bloodflow in
2.
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3.
every compartment must be constrained to be nonnegative (ie, greater than or equal to zero). Such a system, in which the number of compartments and the number of gases are equal, turns out to be quite sensitive to inevitable random experimental errors. Thus, the allocation of bloodflow among the six compartments may jump around between duplicate samples, due to experimental error. It would be desirable to be able to solve the equations in such a way as to return a stable set of compartmental bloodflows from duplicate data sets that differed because of random error only. This would reduce concern that two apparently different results from two data sets reflected a real difference in the lungs and at the same time increase confidence that an observed difference in results was a true biologic change.
information that the method provides have also been published.2527 Many published studies show the findings in a variety of cardiopulmonary diseases and are discussed in Chapter 18, VentilationPerfusion Distributions in Disease.
Fortunately, mathematical methods exist that can overcome these limitations.23,24 The present formulation of the multiple inert gas elimination technique (MIGET) uses an infusion of six inert gases whose partition coefficients ( ) span the range from very low (sulfur hexafluoride [SF6], 0.005) to very high (acetone, 300). The four intervening gases are ethane ( 0.1), cyclopropane ( 0.5), enflurane ( 2.5), and ether ( 12). A 50 VA/Q compartA/Q axis is used with this set of mental discretization of the V six gases. Although the number of compartments (50) exceeds the number of gases (6), by incorporation of a smoothing constraint on the process for solving the equa tions, the VA/Q distribution can be found in a manner that is stable to normal levels of experimental error. It limits the results to smooth frequency distributions, thereby acknowl edging that fine resolution in the shape of the VA/Q distribution cannot be determined. Given the likelihood that there are some 100,000 individual acini (essentially the unit of gas exchange) in a lung, it is highly unlikely that actual VA/Q distributions are ragged or jagged. Imagine the frequency distribution of height in a population of 100,000 people. With this many points, it would be a smooth curve. Thus, limiting the outcome to smooth curves is unlikely to impose a significant constraint. To understand the concept of smoothing, a good analogy is the task of mapping the location of, say, 50 tennis balls thrown randomly onto a tennis court. It would take precisely 50 independent measurements to locate all 50 balls. However, if the 50 balls were first threaded onto a rope, each ball separated by, say, no more than 12 inches from its neighbor, and the rope of balls was thrown randomly onto the court, the task of mapping the location of all 50 balls would be far easier. Mapping every, say, eighth ball would allow the approximate locations of the remainder to be identified without further measurements. This is because the string of 50 balls would have to form a relatively smooth line because of the short distances between adjacent balls. The details of the mathematical process (including the non-negativity requirement, which involves a different process from that of smoothing) used for the MIGET can be found in a series of publications23,24 and are not further presented here. Papers analyzing the limits on the
FIGURE 17-12 VA/Q distribution typical of a young, normal, upright human subject. The distribution is narrow, symmetric, and confined to the VA/Q decade between about 0.3 and 3. There is no shunt or dead space. See text for further analysis.
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useful quantitative index of dispersion, but it should not strictly be called the standard deviation. The third moment (about the mean) depicts the curves symmetry. A third moment equal to zero indicates a symmetric distribution; skewing to the left or right is manifested by a third moment different from zero. A large body of work over the years has established that the second moment has a normal range that runs from about 0.3 to 0.6 (95% confidence limits).19,2931 A completely homogeneous lung (which does not exist) would have a value of zero. A patient with severe lung disease in an intensive care unit on a ventilator might have a second moment of 2 to 2.5. Thus, mildly abnormal values run from 0.6 to about 0.8. Moderately abnormal values run from 0.8 to about 1.2, and severe VA/Q inequality produces a second moment above 1.2. The highest values seen are about 2.5. The distribution shown in Figure 17-11A has a second moment of 1.25, whereas that of the normal subject in Figure 17-12 has a second moment of 0.40. Note that neither shunt nor dead space, which are explicitly recovered by the MIGET, along with the rest of the distribution, is included in the second moment calculation because the formula requires taking the logarithm of the VA/Q ratio of each compartment in the distribution. The logarithms of zero and of infinity are not definable, so shunt and dead space are excluded and reported separately as fractions of total pulmonary bloodflow and ventilation respectively.
are used to find alveolar PO2 and the corresponding end capillary oxygen concentration for each VA/Q ratio unit in the VA/Q distribution. This computation is performed with the explicit assumption that oxygen exchange across the bloodgas barrier is not diffusion limited. Then, mass conservation rules are used to compute the mixed arterial oxygen concentration as a bloodflow-weighted average of oxygen concentrations from all units in the particular VA/Q distribution under consideration. Mixed arterial PO2 is then determined from the arterial oxygen concentration with use of the hemoglobin dissociation curve. If there is no diffusion limitation for oxygen, the arterial PO2 calculated in this way will agree with the arterial PO2 that was actually measured. However, if oxygen is, in fact, diffusion limited, the actual arterial PO2 will be lower than that predicted by the MIGET. The difference between the actual and the predicted arterial PO2 values then can be used to calculate the oxygendiffusing capacity of the lungs necessary to explain the difference.35 With this approach, diffusion limitation of oxygen uptake is rarely seen, even in lung diseasemeasured and expected arterial PO2 values are in agreement. The only condition in which diffusion limitation is seen consistently in lung disease is pulmonary fibrosis during exercise.36 Diffusion limitation is actually more commonly observed in health, but only during the heaviest of exercise, especially in athletes, where pulmonary capillary red cell transit time is presumed to be reduced to the point of causing diffusion limitation. Exercise at altitude accentuates diffusion limitation for oxygen, so that it is seen in essentially all normal subjects, not just athletes.30,33 At altitude, it can have an enormous negative impact on arterial oxygenation and thus tissue oxygen availability.37
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attenuated by the concomitant increase in cardiac output because of an increase in mixed venous PO2 (see Figure 17-5A). Another example is reconciling the mild hypoxemia usually seen in asthmatic patients with the much more severe hypoxemia seen in patients with large myocardial infarcts and pulmonary edema resulting from associated heart failure.39 With use of the MIGET, the actual fractional perfusion of poorly ventilated regions is often greater in asthmatic patients than in patients with heart failure. This apparent paradox is explained by the fact that cardiac output is often above normal in asthmatic patients, whereas it is considerably reduced in patients with heart failure, with consequent effects on mixed venous PO2. Thus, maintaining a high mixed venous PO2 is effective in preventing severe hypoxemia in asthma, whereas failure to keep mixed venous PO2 levels normal leads to substantial hypoxemia even when VA/Q inequality is not that severe. Further situations in which extrapulmonary factors may change arterial oxygenation can be imagined. A simple case is when inspired oxygen levels are changed. Arterial PO2 will change as a result, and the MIGET allows one to answer the question of whether or not the change in PO2 is as expected for the particular change in FIO2. One needs to know the distribution of VA/Q ratios for this, because the expected change is very depend ent on the underlying pattern of VA/Q inequality. One uses the method much as described above in the context of assessing diffusion limitation. If the change in PO2 is not as expected, the MIGET will identify the reason, be it a change in VA/Q relationships or something else.
REFERENCES
1. Dubois AB. Alveolar CO2 and O2 during breath holding, expiration, and inspiration. J Appl Physiol 1952;5:112. 2. Barcroft JA, Cooke A, Hartridge H, et al. The flow of oxygen through the pulmonary epithelium. J Physiol (Lond) 1920;53:45072. 3. Roughton FJW, Forster RE. Relative importance of diffusion and chemical reaction rates determining rate of exchange of gases in the human lung with special reference to true diffusing capacity of pulmonary membrane and volume of blood in the lung capillaries. J Appl Physiol 1957;11: 290302. 4. Wagner PD. Diffusion and chemical reaction in pulmonary gas exchange. Physiol Rev 1977;57:257312. 5. Fowler WS. Lung function studies. II. The respiratory dead space. Am J Physiol 1948;154:40516. 6. Johnson BD, Badr MS, Dempsey JA. Impact of the aging pulmonary system on the response to exercise. Clin Chest Med 1994;15:22946. 7. West JB, Tsukimoto K, Mathieu-Costello O, et al. Stress failure in pulmonary capillaries. J Appl Physiol 1990;70:173142. 8. West JB, Mathieu-Costello O, Jones JH, et al. Stress failure of pulmonary capillaries in racehorses with exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage. J Appl Physiol 1993;75:1097109. 9. West JB. Regional differences in gas exchange in the lung of erect man. J Appl Physiol 1962;17:8938. 10. West JB, Dollery CT. Distribution of blood flow in isolated lung: relation to vascular and alveolar pressures. J Appl Physiol 1964;19:71324. 11. Wagner PD, McRae J, Read J. Stratified distribution of blood flow in secondary lobule of the rat lung. J Appl Physiol 1967;22:111523. 12. Glenny RW, Robertson HT. Fractal modeling of pulmonary blood flow heterogeneity. J Appl Physiol 1991;70:102430. 13. Riley RL, Cournand A. Ideal alveolar air and the analysis of ventilation/perfusion relationships in the lung. J Appl Physiol 1949;1:82547. 14. Rahn H, Fenn WO. A graphical analysis of the respiratory gas exchange. Washington, DC: American Physiological Society; 1955. 15. West JB. Ventilation/perfusion inequality and overall gas exchange in computer models of the lung. Respir Physiol 1969;7:88110. 16. West JB, Wagner PD. Pulmonary gas exchange. In: West JB, editor. Bioengineering aspects of the lung. Vol 3. New York: Marcel Dekker; 1977. p. 361458. 17. Young IH, Mazzone RW, Wagner PD. Identification of functional lung unit in the dog by graded vascular embolization. J Appl Physiol 1980;49:13241. 18. Weibel ER. Morphometry of the human lung. New York: Springer-Verlag; 1963. 19. Cards J, Burgos F, Diaz O, et al. Increase in pulmonary ventilation/perfusion inequality with age in healthy individuals. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1997;156:64853. 20. Sorbini CA, Grassi V, Solinas E, et al. Arterial oxygen tension in relation to age in healthy subjects. Respiration 1968; 25:310. 21. Raine JM, Bishop JM. Aa difference in O2 tension and physiological dead space in normal man. J Appl Physiol 1963; 18:2848. 22. Rahn H, Otis AB. Mans respiratory response during and after acclimatization to high altitude. Am J Physiol 1949;157: 44562. 23. Evans JW, Wagner PD. Limits on VA/Q distributions from analysis of experimental inert gas elimination. J Appl Physiol 1977;42:88998.
SUMMARY
This chapter has focused on how ventilation and bloodflow are distributed to the very large number of alveoli in the lung and laid out the structural basis of why these distributions are not uniform, even in health. What is remarkable is that, despite the great potential for severe maldistribution of both ventilation and bloodflow, the overall amount of VA/Q inequality is very small and has a negligible impact on gas exchange and arterial PO2 and PCO2. The relationship between how much oxygen (and carbon dioxide) is exchanged in a unit of lung and the VA/Q ratio of that unit is developed with the use of basic principles of mass conservation. This is then used to explain how nonuniformity in the distribution of either ventilation or bloodflow in disease impairs gas exchange and how the body adjusts to maintain overall oxygen and carbon dioxide transport between the environment and the tissues. These same relationships are then used in reverse as tools to characterize the degree of VA/Q inequality on the basis of simple two- and three-compartment models. This is done by taking measurements of oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange and using them to partition bloodflow and ventilation among the compartments. Finally, because of the limitations of these models, the MIGET is presented in some depth. This method is a tool for determining not only the distribution of ventilation/perfusion ratios but also the roles of diffusion limitation of oxygen uptake and of potential extrapulmonary factors that can significantly modu late arterial PO2 and PCO2 when VA/Q inequality is present.
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Ventilation, Pulmonary Circulation and Gas Exchange 32. Wagner PD, West JB. Ventilationperfusion relationships. In: West JB, editor. Ventilation, blood flow and diffusion. Vol 1. New York: Academic Press; 1980. p. 21962. 33. Torre-Bueno JR, Wagner PD, Saltzman HA, et al. Diffusion limitation in normal humans during exercise at sea level and simulated altitude. J Appl Physiol 1985;58:98995. 34. Lilienthal Jr JL, Riley RI, Proemel DD, et al. An experimental analysis in man of the oxygen pressure gradient from alveolar air to arterial blood during rest and exercise at sea level and at altitude. Am J Physiol 1946;147:199216. 35. Hammond MD, Hempleman SC. Oxygen diffusing capacity estimates derived from measured VA/Q distributions in man. Respir Physiol 1987;69:12947. 36. Agust AGN, Roca J, Gea J, et al. Mechanisms of gas exchange impairment in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Am Rev Respir Dis 1991;143:21925. 37. Wagner PD, Sutton JR, Reeves JT, et al. Operation Everest II: pulmonary gas exchange during a simulated ascent of Mt Everest. J Appl Physiol 1987;63:234859. 38. Wagner PD, Dantzker DR, Iacovoni VE, et al. Ventilationperfusion inequality in asymptomatic asthma. Am Rev Respir Dis 1978;118:51124. 39. Bencowitz HZ, LeWinter MM, Wagner PD. Effect of sodium nitroprusside on ventilation/perfusion mismatching in heart failure. JACC 1984;4:91822.
24. Wagner PD. Estimation of distributions of ventilation/perfusion ratios. Ann Biomed Eng 1981;9:54356. 25. Ratner ER, Wagner PD. Resolution of the multiple inert gas method for estimating VA/Q maldistribution. Respir Physiol 1982;49:293313. 26. Olszowka AJ. Does inert gas exchange data provide enough information to recover VA/Q distributions present in the lung? Physiologist 1975;18:339. 27. Olszowka A, Wagner PD. Numerical analysis in gas exchange. In: West JB, editor. Pulmonary gas exchange. New York: Academic Press; 1980. p. 263306. 28. Wagner PD, Laravuso RB, Uhl RR, et al. Continuous distributions of ventilationperfusion ratios in normal subjects breathing air and 100% O2. J Clin Invest 1974; 54:5468. 29. Gale GE, Torre-Bueno JR, Moon RE, et al. Ventilation/ perfusion inequality in normal humans during exercise at sea level and simulated altitude. J Appl Physiol 1985; 58:97888. 30. Wagner PD, Gale GE, Moon RE, et al. Pulmonary gas exchange in humans exercising at sea level and simulated altitude. J Appl Physiol 1986;61:26070. 31. Wagner PD, Hedenstierna G, Bylin G. Ventilationperfusion inequality in chronic asthma. Am Rev Respir Dis 1987; 136:60512.