Journal of applied physiology
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The reference method for the assessment of diaphragm function relies on the measurement of transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi). Local muscle stiffness measured using ultrafast shear wave elastography (SWE) provides reliable estimates of muscle force in locomotor muscles. This study aimed at investigating whether SWE could be used as a surrogate of Pdi to evaluate diaphragm function. ⋯ NEW & NOTEWORTHY Accurate and specific estimation of diaphragm effort is critical for evaluating and monitoring diaphragm dysfunction. The measurement of transdiaphragmatic pressure requires the use of invasive gastric and esophageal probes. In the present work, we demonstrate that changes in diaphragm stiffness assessed with ultrasound shear wave elastography reflect changes in transdiaphragmatic pressure, therefore offering a new noninvasive method for gauging diaphragm effort.
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Bronchial thermoplasty is a recent treatment for asthma in which ablative thermal energy is delivered to specific large airways according to clinical guidelines. Therefore, current practice is effectively "blind," as it is not informed by patient-specific data. The present study seeks to establish whether a patient-specific approach based on structural or functional patient data can improve outcomes and/or reduce the number of procedures required for clinical efficacy. ⋯ NEW & NOTEWORTHY Bronchial thermoplasty is a recent treatment for asthma in which thermal energy is delivered via bronchoscope to specific airways in an effort to directly target airway smooth muscle. Current practice involves the treatment of a standard set of airways, unguided by patient-specific data. We consider the potential for guided treatments, either by functional or structural data from the lung, and show that treatment guided by structural data has the potential to improve clinical practice.
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The second gas effect (SGE) occurs when nitrous oxide enhances the uptake of volatile anesthetics administered simultaneously. Recent work shows that the SGE is greater in blood than in the gas phase, that this is due to ventilation-perfusion mismatch, that as mismatch increases, the SGE increases in blood but is diminished in the gas phase, and that these effects persist well into the period of nitrous oxide maintenance anesthesia. These modifications of the SGE are most pronounced with the low soluble agents in current use. ⋯ Although gas uptake with ventilation-perfusion inequality exceeding that when matching is optimal is shown to be possible, it is less likely than alveolar-arterial partial pressure reversal. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Net uptake of gases administered with nitrous oxide may proceed against an alveolar-arterial partial pressure gradient. The alveolar-arterial gradient for nitrogen in the steady-state breathing air depends not only on the existence of a distribution of ventilation-perfusion ratios in the lung but also on the presence of a net change in gas volume and is opposite in direction to the direction of net gas volume uptake.
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Patients on high inspired O2 concentrations are at risk of atelectasis, a problem that has been quantitatively assessed using analysis of ratio of ventilation to perfusion (V̇a/Q̇) equations. This approach ignores the potential of the elastic properties of the lung to support gas exchange through "apneic" oxygenation in units with no tidal ventilation, and is based on an error in the conservation of mass equations. To fill this gap, we correct the error and compare the pressure drops associated with apneic gas exchange with the pressure differences that can be supported by lung recoil. ⋯ We further argue that the fundamental V̇a/Q̇ equations are invalid in these circumstances, and that the issue of atelectasis in low V̇a/Q̇ will require modifications to account for this additional mode of gas exchange. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Breathing high concentrations of oxygen increases the likelihood of atelectasis because of oxygen absorption, which is thought to be inevitable in regions with relatively low ventilation/perfusion ratios. However, airspaces of the lung resist collapse because of the forces of interdependence, and can, with low or even zero active tidal ventilation, draw in an inspiratory flow of oxygen sufficient to replace the oxygen consumed, thus preventing collapse of airspaces served by all but the most narrowed airways.