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CO2 and mechanical factors reduce blood flow in a collapsed lung lobe
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1984
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Acute Lung InjuryBlood FlowCollapsed Lung LobeElectromagnetic Flow ProbesLung HealthBlood Flow MeasurementCardiologyPulmonary CirculationVentilation HypoxiaPulmonary MedicineRespiration (Physiology)PhysiologyPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsThoracic SurgeryTissue OxygenationAnesthesiaMedicineMechanical FactorsAnesthesiology
Left lower lobe-to-total blood flow ratio (Ql/QT) was measured with electromagnetic flow probes in anesthetized open-chest dogs. There was a 66% reduction in Ql/QT during lobar collapse, a 53% reduction during lobar ventilation hypoxia with pulmonary venous PO2 and PCO2 equal to mixed venous tensions, and a 45% reduction during a similar degree of ventilation hypoxia but with normal end-tidal PCO2. We concluded that the reduction in blood flow during lobar collapse is due predominantly to hypoxic vasoconstriction, but that this mechanism is augmented by the raised PCO2 and mechanical factors present during collapse.