Dilatation of the Constricted Human Airway by Tidal Expansion of Lung Parenchyma

Tera Lavoie(University of Chicago), Ramaswamy Krishnan(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), Harrison R. Siegel(University of Chicago), Essence D. Maston(University of Chicago), Jeffrey J. Fredberg, Julian Solway(University of Chicago), Maria Dowell(University of Chicago)
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
June 8, 2012
Cited by 94Open Access
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Abstract

RATIONALE: In the normal lung, breathing and deep inspirations potently antagonize bronchoconstriction, but in the asthmatic lung this salutary effect is substantially attenuated or even reversed. To explain these findings, the prevailing hypothesis focuses on contracting airway smooth muscle and posits a nonlinear dynamic interaction between actomyosin binding and the tethering forces imposed by tidally expanding lung parenchyma. OBJECTIVE: This hypothesis has never been tested directly in bronchial smooth muscle embedded within intraparenchymal airways. Our objective here is to fill that gap. METHODS: We designed a novel system to image contracting intraparenchymal human airways situated within near-normal lung architecture and subjected to dynamic parenchymal expansion that simulates breathing. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Reversal of bronchoconstriction depended on the degree to which breathing actually stretched the airway, which in turn depended negatively on severity of constriction and positively on the depth of breathing. Such behavior implies positive feedbacks that engender airway instability. OVERALL CONCLUSIONS: These findings help to explain heterogeneity of airflow obstruction as well as why, in people with asthma, deep inspirations are less effective in reversing bronchoconstriction.


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