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Physiologic growth and development of the lung during the first year of life.
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1986
Year
Acute Lung InjuryNeonatologyPulmonary CarePediatric Lung DiseasePulmonary Alveolar ProteinosisPhysiologic GrowthLung SizeLung HealthFirst YearVentilationPulmonary MedicineRespiration (Physiology)Lung CancerPulmonary DiseasePulmonary Function TestsFunctional Residual CapacityDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyPediatricsPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsMedicineNeonatal Pulmonary Physiology
Pulmonary function tests were performed on a total of 125 healthy infants younger than 25 postconception (pc) months of age. Maximal expiratory flow at functional residual capacity (VmaxFRC) was measured from partial expiratory flow-volume curves, and functional residual capacity (FRC) was measured by the helium dilution technique. There was a highly significant (p less than 0.01) linear regression for both VmaxFRC and FRC with increasing body length. The highest size-corrected flows (VmaxFRC/FRC) were obtained in the healthy premature (2.7 FRC/s, n = 6) and full-term (2.5 FRC/s, n = 5) infants, and there was a relatively constant value between 13 and 25 pc months of age (1.2 FRC/s), which was similar to those reported in older children and adults. In an age-matched group of infants 10 to 16 pc months of age, females had both higher absolute flows (126 versus 102 ml/s, p less than 0.03) and size-corrected flows (1.4 versus 1.0 FRC/s, p less than 0.001) than did males. These physiologic data support the concepts that neonates have proportionately larger airways relative to their lung volume at FRC, infants have size-corrected flows similar to those in older children and adults, and female infants have proportionately larger airways relative to their lung size than do male infants.