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American Physiological Society, Journal of Applied Physiology, 5(90), p. 1754-1762

DOI: 10.1152/jappl.2001.90.5.1754

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Saline aerosol bolus dispersion. I. The effect of acinar airway alteration

Journal article published in 2001 by Sylvia Verbanck ORCID, Daniel Schuermans, Walter Vincken, Manuel Paiva
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

We explored the possibility of using a saline aerosol for bolus dispersion measurements to detect peripheral airway alterations in smokers. Indexes of ventilation inhomogeneity in conductive ( S cond) and acinar ( S acin) lung zones, as derived from the multiple-breath N2 washout (Verbanck S, Schuermans D, Van Muylem A, Noppen M, Paiva M, and Vincken W, J Appl Physiol 83: 1807–1816, 1997), were also measured. The saline bolus test consisted of inhaling 60-ml saline aerosol boluses to different volumetric lung depths (VLD) in the 1.1 liter volume above functional residual capacity. In the never-smoker group ( n = 12), saline boluses showed bolus dispersion values consistent with normal values reported in the literature for 0.5- to 1-μm aerosols. In the smoker group ( n = 12; 28 ± 9 pack years, mean ± SD), significant increases were seen on dispersion and skew of the most peripherally inhaled saline boluses (VLD = 800 ml; P < 0.05) as well as on S acin ( P = 0.007) with respect to never-smokers. Shallow inhaled boluses (VLD = 200 ml) and S cond did not reveal any significant differences between smokers and never-smokers. This study shows the consistent response of two conceptually independent tests, in which both saline aerosol and gas-derived indexes point to a heterogeneous distribution of smoking-induced structural alterations in the lung periphery.