Publication | Open Access
Scaling behavior in crackle sound during lung inflation
50
Citations
28
References
1999
Year
AeroacousticsPattern FormationEngineeringPhysicsWave PropagationNoiseWave MotionSound PropagationPeriodic Travelling WaveLung InflationNonlinear AcousticLung LobesSlow Inflation
During slow inflation of lung lobes, we measure a sequence of short explosive transient sound waves called "crackles," each consisting of an initial spike followed by ringing. The crackle time series is irregular and intermittent, with the number of spikes of size s following a power law, n(s) proportional, variants(-alpha), with alpha=2.77+/-0.05. We develop a model of crackle wave generation and propagation in a tree structure that combines the avalanchelike opening of airway segments with the wave propagation of crackles in a tree structure. The agreement between experiments and simulations suggests that (i) the irregularities are a consequence of structural heterogeneity in the lung, (ii) the intermittent behavior is due to the avalanchelike opening, and (iii) the scaling is a result of successive attenuations acting on the sound spikes as they propagate through a cascade of bifurcations along the airway tree.
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