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Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol 70, Issue 5 2252-2258, Copyright © 1991 by American Physiological Society
ARTICLES |
A. Tully, A. Brancatisano, S. H. Loring and L. A. Engel
Thoracic Medicine Unit, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
We examined the effect of posterior cricoarytenoid (PCA) muscle activity on the pressure-flow (PV) relationship of the larynx in five anesthetized tracheostomized dogs. The PCA activity was recorded using bipolar fine-wire electrodes, expressed as a percentage of the quiet breathing level and altered by mechanical ventilation, changes in lung volume, and chest wall compression. Subglottic pressure was recorded while a constant flow of air was passed through the upper airway. In the absence of PCA activity the PV relationship was alinear and could be described by a power function (P = K0Va, where K0 and a are constants). The slope of the log P-log V plots in the absence of PCA and thyroarytenoid activity was 1.83 +/- 0.02 (SD), whereas with increasing PCA activity it was 1.88 +/- 0.11. An effective hydraulic diameter (DH) was calculated for 20% increments of PCA activity, and in two dogs glottic diameter (Dg) was calculated from glottic area measurements obtained by fiber-optic laryngoscopy. Both DH and Dg increased linearly with increasing PCA activity. Denervation of the cricothyroid muscle had no systematic effect on laryngeal resistance. The results indicate that the PV relationship of the larynx may be described by a power function with a single exponent, the magnitude of which is independent of glottic dilator muscle activity and consistent with orifice flow. However, laryngeal diameter increases linearly with PCA activity in the range studied.
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