Vol. 86, Issue 1, 1a-1a, January 1999
CORRIGENDA
Volume 84, June 1998
Abstract: In line 15 of the Abstract, "pulmonary
capillary blood" was mistakenly printed following "CO." The
corrected Abstract is reprinted
below.
Heller, H., and K.-D.
Schuster. Role of reaction resistance in limiting carbon
monoxide uptake in rabbit lungs. J. Appl. Physiol. 84(6):
2066-2069, 1998.
The contribution of reaction resistance to overall
resistance to pulmonary carbon monoxide (CO) uptake
[DLCO/(
CO · Vc),
where DLCO is lung CO diffusing capacity,
CO is CO uptake conductance of erythrocytes, and Vc is
pulmonary capillary blood volume] was determined in 10 anesthetized, paralyzed, and artificially ventilated rabbits. On the basis of the
classical double-reciprocal equation of F. G. W. Roughton and R. E. Forster (J. Appl. Physiol. 11: 290-302, 1957),
DLCO/(
CO · Vc)
was obtained by solving the relation
DLCO/(
CO · Vc) = 1
2/(DLNO/DLCO),
where DLNO/DLCO
represents the ratio between the respective single-breath diffusing
capacities (DL) of nitric oxide (NO) and CO. The lungs of
eight rabbits were inflated, starting from residual volume, by using 55 ml of indicator gas mixture (0.2% CO and 0.05% NO in nitrogen).
DL values were calculated by taking the end-tidal partial
pressures of CO and NO as analyzed by using a respiratory mass
spectrometer. The overall value was DLCO/(
CO · Vc) = 0.4 ± 0.025 (mean ± SD). Because of the use of
O2-free indicator gas mixtures, the end-tidal
O2 partial pressures were ~21 Torr. In one other rabbit,
the application of 0.2% CO and 0.001% NO yielded
DLCO/(
CO · Vc) = 0.39; in the tenth rabbit, however, inspiratory volume was varied,
and an identical value was found at functional residual capacity. We
conclude that the contribution of reaction resistance to overall
resistance to pulmonary CO uptake is independent of the inspiratory NO
concentration used, including, with respect to the pertinent
literature, the conclusion that in rabbits, dogs, and humans this
contribution amounts to 40% when determined at functional residual
capacity.
J APPL PHYSIOL 86(1):1a-1a