Journal of Applied Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 60: 1493-1497, 1986;
8750-7587/86 $5.00
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Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol 60, Issue 5 1493-1497, Copyright © 1986 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Effect of raised thoracic pressure and volume on 99mTc-DTPA clearance in humans

K. B. Nolop, D. L. Maxwell, D. Royston and J. M. Hughes

Although positive airway pressure is often used to treat acute pulmonary edema, the effects on epithelial solute flux are not well known. We measured independently the effect of 1) positive pressure and 2) voluntary hyperinflation on the clearance of inhaled technetium-99m-labeled diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (99mTc-DTPA) in six nonsmokers and six smokers. Lung volumes were monitored by inductance plethysmography. Each subject was studied in four situations: 1) low end-expiratory volume (LO-), 2) low volume plus 9 cmH2O continuous positive airway pressure (LO+), 3) high end-expiratory volume (HI-), and 4) high volume plus continuous positive airway pressure (HI+). The clearance half time of 99mTc-DTPA for the nonsmokers decreased from 64.8 +/- 7.0 min (mean +/- SE) at LO- to 23.2 +/- 5.3 min at HI- (P less than 0.05). Positive pressure had no synergistic effect. The mean clearance half time for the smokers was faster than nonsmokers at base line but unaffected by similar changes in thoracic volume and pressure. We conclude that, in nonsmokers, positive airway pressure increases 99mTc-DTPA clearance primarily through an increase in lung volume and that smokers are immune to these effects.


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