4.6 Article

Negative wave reflections in pulmonary arteries

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Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.2001.281.2.H895

Keywords

lung; hemodynamics

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The pulmonary arterial branching pattern suggests that the early systolic forward-going compression wave (FCW) might be reflected as a backward-going expansion wave (BEW). Accordingly, in 11 open-chest anesthetized dogs we measured proximal pulmonary arterial pressure and flow (velocity) and evaluated wave reflection using wave-intensity analysis under low-volume, high-volume, high-volume + 20 cmH(2)O positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), and hypoxic conditions. We defined the reflection coefficient R as the ratio of the energy of the reflected wave (BEW [-]; backward-going compression wave, BCW [+]) to that of the incident wave (FCW [+]). We found that R = -0.07 +/-0.02 under low-volume conditions, which increased in absolute magnitude to -0.20 +/-0.04 (P < 0.01) under high-volume conditions. The addition of PEEP increased R further to -0.260.02 (P < 0.01). All of these BEWs were reflected from a site 3 cm downstream. During hypoxia, the BEW was maintained and a BCW appeared (R = +0.09 +/-0.03) from a closed-end site similar to9 cm downstream. The normal pulmonary arterial circulation in the open-chest dog is characterized by negative wave reflection tending to facilitate right ventricular ejection; this reflection increases with increasing blood volume and PEEP.

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