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J Appl Physiol 106: 1832-1839, 2009. First published April 2, 2009; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.91614.2008
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Axial distribution heterogeneity of nitric oxide airway production in healthy adults

Yannick Kerckx1 and Alain Van Muylem2

1Biomedical Physics Laboratory, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels; and 2Chest Department, Erasme University Hospital, Brussels, Belgium

Submitted 18 December 2008 ; accepted in final form 31 March 2009

Model simulations of nitric oxide (NO) transport considering molecular diffusion showed that the total bronchial NO production needed to reproduce a given exhaled value is deeply influenced by its axial distribution. Experimental data obtained by fibroscopy were available about proximal airway contribution (Silkoff PE, McClean PA, Caramori M, Slutsky AS. Zamel N. Respir Physiol 113: 33–38, 1998), and recent experiments using heliox instead of air gave insight on the peripheral airway production (Shin HW, Condorelli P, Rose-Gottron CM, Cooper DM, George SC. J Appl Physiol 97: 874–882, 2004; Kerckx Y, Michils A, Van Muylem A. J Appl Physiol 104: 918–924, 2008). This theoretical work aimed at obtaining a realistic distribution of NO production in healthy adults by meeting both proximal and peripheral experimental constraints. To achieve this, a model considering axial diffusion with geometrical boundaries derived from Weibel's morphometrical data was divided into serial compartments, each characterized by its axial boundaries and its part of bronchial NO production. A four-compartment model was able to meet both criteria. Two compartments were found to share all the NO production: one proximal (generations 0 and 1; 15–25% of the NO production) and one inside the acinus (proximal limit, generations 14–16; distal limit, generations 16 and 17; 75–85% of the NO production). Remarkably, this finding implies a quasi nil production in the main part of the conducting airways and in the acinar airways distal to generation 17. Given the chosen experimental outcomes and reliant on their accuracy, this very inhomogeneous distribution is likely the more realistic one that may be achieved with a "one-trumpet"-shaped model. Refinement should come from a more realistic description of the acinus structure.

exhaled nitric oxide; nitric oxide bronchial production; modeling



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: A. Van Muylem, Chest Dept., CUB Erasme, 808 Route de Lennik, B-1070 Brussels, Belgium (e-mail: avmuylem{at}ulb.ac.be)







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