4.5 Review

Lung tissue mechanics as an emergent phenomenon

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 110, Issue 4, Pages 1111-1118

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.01244.2010

Keywords

pressure-volume curve; viscoelasticity; pulmonary fibrosis; emphysema

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health through NCRR-COBRE [RR-15557, HL-76273, HL-75593, HL-87788, HL-90757, HL-98976]

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The mechanical properties of lung parenchymal tissue are both elastic and dissipative, as well as being highly nonlinear. These properties cannot be fully understood, however, in terms of the individual constituents of the tissue. Rather, the mechanical behavior of lung tissue emerges as a macroscopic phenomenon from the interactions of its microscopic components in a way that is neither intuitive nor easily understood. In this review, we first consider the quasi-static mechanical behavior of lung tissue and discuss computational models that show how smooth nonlinear stress-strain behavior can arise through a percolation-like process in which the sequential recruitment of collagen fibers with increasing strain causes them to progressively take over the load-bearing role from elastin. We also show how the concept of percolation can be used to link the pathologic progression of parenchymal disease at the micro scale to physiological symptoms at the macro scale. We then examine the dynamic mechanical behavior of lung tissue, which invokes the notion of tissue resistance. Although usually modeled phenomenologically in terms of collections of springs and dash-pots, lung tissue viscoelasticity again can be seen to reflect various types of complex dynamic interactions at the molecular level. Finally, we discuss the inevitability of why lung tissue mechanics need to be complex.

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