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1 Department of Medicine,
The distribution
of red blood cells in alveolar capillaries is typically nonuniform, as
shown by intravital microscopy and in alveolar tissue fixed in situ. To
determine the effects of red cell distribution on pulmonary diffusive
gas transport, we computed the uptake of CO across a two-dimensional
geometric capillary model containing a variable number of red blood
cells. Red blood cells are spaced uniformly, randomly, or clustered
without overlap within the capillary. Total CO diffusing capacity
(DLCO)
and membrane diffusing capacity
(DmCO) are calculated by a
finite-element method. Results show that distribution of red blood
cells at a fixed hematocrit greatly affects capillary CO uptake. At any
given average capillary red cell density, the uniform distribution of
red blood cells yields the highest
DmCO and
DLCO,
whereas the clustered distribution yields the lowest values. Random
nonuniform distribution of red blood cells within a single capillary
segment reduces diffusive CO uptake by up to 30%. Nonuniform
distribution of red blood cells among separate capillary segments can
reduce diffusive CO uptake by >50%. This analysis demonstrates that
pulmonary microvascular recruitment for gas exchange does not depend
solely on the number of patent capillaries or the hematocrit; simple
redistribution of red blood cells within capillaries can potentially
account for 50% of the observed physiological recruitment of
DLCO from rest to exercise.
pulmonary diffusing capacity; membrane diffusing capacity; capillary model; finite-element analysis
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