PULMONARY DENSITY DISTRIBUTION IN EXPERIMENTAL NONCARDIAC CANINE PULMONARY-EDEMA EVALUATED BY COMPUTED TRANSMISSION TOMOGRAPHY
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 19 (3), 168-173
Abstract
The density distribution (anterior-posterior) of the right lung was evaluated in 19 acutely anesthetized supine dogs using computed transmission tomography (CTT). Eleven dogs served as controls and 8 received 0.12 cc/kg of i.v. administered oleic acid. The latter were sequentially imaged over 1 h. Of these dogs 9 (3 control and 6 oleic acid dogs) had wet weight/dry weight ratios of the corresponding anterior and posterior lung sections evaluated immediately upon completion of the scans. In the control animals, the posterior (dependent) lung was 25 .+-. 8% (.+-. SD) denser than the anterior lung, and did not differ if a 2nd section of the lung was evaluated (1 cm cranial or caudal), or if the animal was imaged on a 2nd day (n = 6). In the oleic acid dogs, the posterior portion of the lung was significantly denser 10 min after injection of oleic acid (P < 0.05), and almost twice as dense 1 h after initial injection. The density changes determined by CTT in the anterior and posterior lung zones correlated well with the increasing regional wet weight/dry weight relationships determined from the lung on postmortem exam (r = 0.90). Early subtle density changes in the posterior lung can be found in oleic acid injury pulmonary edema. This can be easily quantitated using CTT, and may prove useful in following physiologic and therapeutic interventions during leaky membrane acute pulmonary injury.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reduction in pulmonary blood volume during positive end-expiratory pressureJournal of Surgical Research, 1983
- Pulmonary EdemaJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1982
- EFFECT OF OLEIC ACID-INDUCED PULMONARY-EDEMA ON PULMONARY AND CHEST WALL MECHANICS IN DOGSPublished by Elsevier ,1980