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Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol 58, Issue 4 1061-1068, Copyright © 1985 by American Physiological Society
ARTICLES |
C. A. Dawson, S. C. Skebba, J. H. Linehan and T. A. Bronikowski
To evaluate the influence of embolus size on the absorption of 125I- deposited on the bronchoalveolar surface, we exposed isolated perfused rabbit lungs to an aerosol containing 125I- for 5 min. We monitored the blood radioactivity for the subsequent 2 h. Several groups of lungs were studied, including those in which blood flow was varied and those in which enough glass beads ranging in size from 58 to 548 micron were injected into the pulmonary artery to approximately double the vascular resistance. The results indicated that under control conditions approximately 94% of the 125I- deposited on the intrapulmonary bronchoalveolar surface was able to reach the pulmonary circulation during the 2-h perfusion period, and the bronchoalveolar surface was sufficiently perfused so that absorption was limited by the rate of diffusion into the blood rather than the rate of blood flow. In the absence of embolization, the initial absorption rate was approximately 10.4%/min regardless of the total flow rate. The 58-micron beads reduced the rate to approximately 7.5%/min, whereas the beads greater than or equal to 194 micron in diameter reduced the rate to approximately 4.5%/min. Thus the effect of the embolization on the absorption rate was directly related to the bead diameter, even though the number of beads injected was adjusted to produce about the same increase in vascular resistance.
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