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The diminished efficiency and altered dynamics of respiration in experimental pulmonary congestion
Authors:HEYER H E  HOLMAN J  SHIRES G T
Affiliation:Department of Internal Medicine, Southwestern Medical College, Dallas, Texas, USA
Abstract:Quantitative measurements of the relative efficiency of respiration in the normal lung, as contrasted with the congested lung, have not been made in the intact experimental animal. In 1934 Christie and Meakins,1 utilizing simultaneous determinations of dynamic intrapleural pressure and of tidal exchange in patients with congestive heart failure, demonstrated a marked decrease in pulmonary distensibility. With appropriate treatment, distensibility was found to increase as the patient improved. In the present study, an approach similar to that of these authors has been used, and studies of the efficiency of respiration have been made on normal dogs at rest and during hyperpnea (produced by the inhalation of carbon dioxide) and contrasted with the relative efficiency of respiration after pulmonary congestion induced by rapid venous infusion. With this approach, a quantitative comparison of the work necessary to achieve a given amount of tidal exchange has been possible in an animal with normal lungs and in the same animal after severe pulmonary congestion. From measurements of tidal exchange, ventilation, and intrapleural pressure fluctuations, a representation of the dynamic changes in these factors during progressive pulmonary congestion has been obtained.
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