In vitro tracheal mechanics by nuclear magnetic resonance imaging

Images of rabbit tracheal cross sections were obtained at a series of transmural pressures ranging from 22 to -95 cmH2O by use of a nuclear magnetic resonance imaging microscope. The excised, washed tracheas were immersed in a solution of phosphate-buffered saline made up in deuterium oxide (D2O, pH...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of applied physiology (1985) Vol. 65; no. 4; p. 1872
Main Authors Lambert, R K, Pack, R J, Xia, Y, Eccles, C D, Callaghan, P T
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.10.1988
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Summary:Images of rabbit tracheal cross sections were obtained at a series of transmural pressures ranging from 22 to -95 cmH2O by use of a nuclear magnetic resonance imaging microscope. The excised, washed tracheas were immersed in a solution of phosphate-buffered saline made up in deuterium oxide (D2O, pH 7.3). The images are maps of proton density in the image slice (2.5 mm thick). All but one series of images showed a collapse process in which the trachealis muscle invaginated asymmetrically, i.e., the muscle appeared to favor one side of the cartilage ring system more than the other. The connecting tissue between the cartilage rings appeared to be more compliant than the rings themselves, thus suggesting that the tracheal lumen became corrugated at negative pressures. In the plane of a cartilage ring, the lumen appeared to remain patent at pressures as low as -95 cmH2O. However, between rings, where the tracheal wall was more compliant, the lumen appeared to be totally occluded at -53 cmH2O. Lumen areas in both the plane of the cartilage rings and in a plane between rings were measured from each series of printed images for six tracheas. These measurements, when normalized, averaged, and plotted against transmural pressure gave asymptotic logarithmic compliances (n1 in the model of Lambert et al., J. Appl. Physiol. 52: 44-56, 1982) of 1.2 +/- 0.4 and 20 +/- 7 for the interring and ring regions, respectively. These values are greater than the critical value of 0.5 (J. Appl. Physiol. 62: 2426-2435, 1987) and are thus consistent with wave speed flow limitation being possible anywhere in the trachea during forced expiration.
ISSN:8750-7587
DOI:10.1152/jappl.1988.65.4.1872