Quantitative Assessment of Pulmonary Function

  • Lamorna A. Spry

Student thesis: Doctoral ThesisDoctor of Philosophy

Abstract

In a search for more quantitative assessment of pulmonary function,
the research concentrated on two major areas of investigation:

Gross impairment of pulmonary gas exchange processes can often be
attributed to regional deformation of normal ventilation-specific
ventilation distributions. Hence, the first topic of investigation considers the recovery of such distributions in normal and diseased states, by a new method with which these distributions can be confidently recovered from inert gas elimination studies. The method is tested using theoretical nitrogen washout data and subsequently used to analyse experimental data from ten normal
and two abnormal subjects. The recovered quasi-continuous
distributions of ventilation to specific ventilation suggest that
whereas young normal lungs behave as two principle respiratory
zones of volume ratio 6.04, this ratio increases rapidly with age, and large deviations from the observed 'normal' pattern occur in diseased states.

The second area of research considers the existence of pulmonary arteriovenous blood shunts which direct blood away from the ventilated regions of the lung, causing severe hypoxia. By means
of a mathematical model of non-steady state inert gas exchange,
a new method is described for rapid and accurate detection of shunt. The effects of regional inequalities of ventilation and perfusion, together with tracer solubility, are studied. The method is shown to merely require the continuous sampling of
injectate and arterial blood tracer concentrations and the
accuracy is independent of end-capillary gas concentrations and
tracer solubility.
Date of AwardJun 1979
Original languageEnglish
Awarding Institution
  • Aston University

Keywords

  • Quantitative assessment
  • pulmonary function

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