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Vol. 83, Issue 6, 2123-2130, December 1997
1 Laboratorio di Ricerche
Cardiovascolar,
Received 23 December 1996; accepted in final form 4 August
1997.
Castiglioni, P., R. Tommasini, M. Morpurgo, and M. Di
Rienzo. Modulation of pulmonary arterial input impedance during transition from inspiration to expiration. J. Appl.
Physiol. 83(6): 2123-2130, 1997.
pulmonary circulation; pulmonary blood pressure; pulmonary blood
flow; intrapleural pressure
We investigated
whether respiration influences pulmonary arterial input impedance
during transition from inspiration to expiration in five anesthetized,
spontaneously breathing dogs. Impedance (Z) was separately assessed for
heart beats occurring in inspiration, in expiration, and during the
transition from inspiration to expiration (transitional beat).
Transitional beats were scored by the ratio between the fraction of
beat falling in expiration and the total beat duration
[expiratory fraction (Efr)] to quantify their
position within the transition. In transitional beats, input resistance
linearly increased with Efr; Z
modulus at the heart-rate frequency
(fHR) decreased up to
50% for Efr = 50%. Z phase at fHR was greater
than in inspiration for Efr <40% and lower for Efr >50%.
Unlike blood flow velocity, mean value and first harmonic of pulmonary
arterial pressure were correlated to
Efr and paralleled the changes of
input resistance and Z at fHR.
This indicates that respiration influences Z through modifications in
arterial pressure. The evidence of important respiratory influences on
Z function may help the pathophysiological interpretation of dysfunctions of the right heart pumping action, such as the so-called cor pulmonale.
0161-7567/97 $5.00
Copyright © 1997 the American Physiological Society
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