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Title: Constant flow- vs. constant pressure-perfusion for studies of pulmonary vasoactive responses. Author: Bjertnaes L, Hauge A. Journal: Acta Physiol Scand; 1980 Jun; 109(2):193-200. PubMed ID: 7424540. Abstract: We have compared the pulmonary vascular responses to a standardized hypoxic vasoconstrictor stimulus (FIO2 = 0.02) obtained during 1) constant volume inflow, with pulmonary arterial pressure as the dependent variable, and 2) constant inflow pressure, with flow as the dependent variable. Isolated rat lungs were perfused at different baseline transvascular pressures. The experimental arrangement allowed changes between the two types of perfusion. Hypoxia at constant pressure perfusion gave a higher percentage rise in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) at all pressure levels. This advantage was however, more than offset by the finding that a) vascular closure (total or partial) often occurred, particularly below arterial pressure of 3 kPa, making detection of graded responses impossible, and b) the control situation was rarely regained. Responses obtained during constant flow were less reduced by elevations in baseline transvascular pressure, and the control situtaion was rapidly and completely regained. The observation that hypoxic vascular closure may occur in the pulmonary vascular bed supports the hypothesis that high altitude edema is caused by precapillary occlusion of a major part of the vascular bed, thereby subjecting still perfused regions to very high pressure and flow.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]