Ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) inhomogeneity was modeled to measure its effect on arterial oxygenation during maintenance-phase anesthesia involving an inspired mixture of 30% O(2) and either N(2)O or N(2). A multialveolar compartment computer model was constructed based on a log normal distribution of VA/Q inhomogeneity. Increasing the log SD of the distribution of blood flow from 0 to 1.75 produced a progressive fall in arterial PO(2) (Pa(O(2))). ⋯ The improvement in Pa(O(2)) when N(2)O was present instead of N(2) was greatest when the degree of VA/Q inhomogeneity was in the range typically seen in anesthetized patients. Models based on distributions of expired and inspired alveolar ventilation give quantitatively different results for Pa(O(2)). In the presence of VA/Q inhomogeneity, second-gas and concentrating effects may have clinically significant effects on arterial oxygenation even at "steady-state" levels of N(2)O uptake.
Department of Anaesthesia, Austin and Repatriation Medical Centre, Heidelberg 3084, Australia. phil@austin.unimelb.edu.au
J. Appl. Physiol. 2001 Jul 1; 91 (1): 17-25.
AbstractVentilation-perfusion (VA/Q) inhomogeneity was modeled to measure its effect on arterial oxygenation during maintenance-phase anesthesia involving an inspired mixture of 30% O(2) and either N(2)O or N(2). A multialveolar compartment computer model was constructed based on a log normal distribution of VA/Q inhomogeneity. Increasing the log SD of the distribution of blood flow from 0 to 1.75 produced a progressive fall in arterial PO(2) (Pa(O(2))). The fall was less steep in the presence of N(2)O than when N(2) was present instead. This was due mainly to the concentrating effect of N(2)O uptake on alveolar PO(2) in moderately low VA/Q compartments. The improvement in Pa(O(2)) when N(2)O was present instead of N(2) was greatest when the degree of VA/Q inhomogeneity was in the range typically seen in anesthetized patients. Models based on distributions of expired and inspired alveolar ventilation give quantitatively different results for Pa(O(2)). In the presence of VA/Q inhomogeneity, second-gas and concentrating effects may have clinically significant effects on arterial oxygenation even at "steady-state" levels of N(2)O uptake.