Physiological Reports (Aug 2020)

End‐expiratory lung volume remains stable during N2 MBW in healthy sleeping infants

  • Per M. Gustafsson,
  • Laszlo Kadar,
  • Sanna Kjellberg,
  • Lena Andersson,
  • Anders Lindblad,
  • Paul D. Robinson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14477
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 16
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract We have previously shown that functional residual capacity (FRC) and lung clearance index were significantly greater in sleeping healthy infants when measured by N2 (nitrogen) washout using 100% O2 (oxygen) versus 4% SF6 (sulfur hexafluoride) washout using air. Following 100% O2 exposure, tidal volumes decreased by over 30%, while end‐expiratory lung volume (EELV, i.e., FRC) rose markedly based on ultrasonic flow meter assessments. In the present study to investigate the mechanism behind the observed changes, N2 MBW was performed in 10 separate healthy full‐term spontaneously sleeping infants, mean (range) 26 (18–31) weeks, with simultaneous EELV monitoring (respiratory inductance plethysmography, RIP) and oxygen uptake (V´O2) assessment during prephase air breathing, during N2 washout by exposure to 100% O2, and subsequently during air breathing. While flow meter signals suggested a rise in ELLV by mean (SD) 26 (9) ml over the washout period, RIP signals demonstrated no EELV change. V'O2/FRC ratio during air breathing was mean (SD) 0.43 (0.08)/min, approximately seven times higher than that calculated from adult data. We propose that our previously reported flow meter‐based overestimation of EELV was in fact a physiological artifact caused by rapid and marked movement of O2 across the alveolar capillary membrane into the blood and tissue during 100% O2 exposure, without concomitant transfer of N2 to the same degree in the opposite direction. This may be driven by the high observed O2 consumption and resulting cardiac output encountered in infancy. Furthermore, the low resting lung volume in infancy may make this error in lung volume determination by N2 washout relatively large.

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