OBJECTIVE -Alveolar microvascular function is moderately impaired in type 1 diabetes, as manifested by restriction of lung volume and diffusing capacity (DL CO ). We examined whether similar impairment develops in type 2 diabetes and defined the physiologic sources of impairment as well as the relationships to glycemia and systemic microangiopathy. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS-A cross-sectional study was conducted at a university-affiliated diabetes treatment center and outpatient diabetes clinic, involving 69 nonsmoking type 2 diabetic patients without overt cardiopulmonary disease. Lung volume, pulmonary blood flow (Q ), DL CO , membrane diffusing capacity (measured from nitric oxide uptake [DL NO ]), and pulmonary capillary blood volume (V C ) were determined at rest and exercise for comparison with those in 45 healthy nonsmokers as well as with normal reference values.RESULTS -In type 2 diabetic patients, peak levels of oxygen uptake, Q and DL CO , DL NO , and V C at exercise were 10 -25% lower compared with those in control subjects. In nonobese patients (BMI Ͻ30 kg/m 2 ), reductions in DL CO , DL NO , and V C were fully explained by the lower lung volume and peak Q , but these factors did not fully explain the impairment in obese patients (BMI Ͼ30 kg/m 2 ). The slope of the increase in V C with respect to Q was reduced ϳ20% in patients regardless of BMI, consistent with impaired alveolar-capillary recruitment. Functional impairment was directly related to A1C level, retinopathy, neuropathy, and microalbuminuria in a sex-specific manner.CONCLUSIONS -Alveolar microvascular reserves are reduced in type 2 diabetes, reflecting restriction of lung volume, alveolar perfusion, and capillary recruitment. This reduction correlates with glycemic control and extrapulmonary microangiopathy and is aggravated by obesity.
Lung diffusing capacity for nitric oxide (DLNO) is used to measure alveolar membrane conductance (DMNO), but disagreement remains as to whether DMNO=DLNO, and whether blood conductance (thetaNO)=infinity. Our previous in vitro and in vivo studies suggested that thetaNO
After pneumonectomy (PNX), mechanical strain on the remaining lung is greatly increased. To assess whether remaining lobes expand uniformly after left or right PNX (removing 42 and 58% of lung mass, respectively), we performed high-resolution computed tomography (CT) scans at 45 ml/kg above end-expiratory lung volume on adult male foxhounds after left or right PNX, which were compared with adult Sham controls. Air and tissue volumes were separately measured in each lobe. After left PNX, air and tissue volumes in the right upper and cardiac lobes increased approximately 2.2-fold above and below the heart, whereas volumes in right middle and lower lobes did not change significantly. After right PNX, air and tissue volumes in the left upper and middle lobes increased 2.3- to 2.7-fold across the midline anterior to the heart, whereas the left lower lobe expanded approximately 1.9-fold posterior to the heart. Regional changes in volume density of tissue post-PNX estimated by CT scan parallel postmortem estimates by morphometric analyses. Data indicate heterogeneous regional distribution of mechanical lung strain, which could influence the differential cellular compensatory response following right and left PNX.
The spleen acts as an erythrocyte reservoir in highly aerobic species such as the dog and horse. Sympathetic-mediated splenic contraction during exercise reversibly enhances convective O2 transport by increasing hematocrit, blood volume, and O2-carrying capacity. Based on theoretical interactions between erythrocytes and capillary membrane (Hsia CCW, Johnson RL Jr, and Shah D. J Appl Physiol 86: 1460-1467, 1999) and experimental findings in horses of a postsplenectomy reduction in peripheral O2-diffusing capacity (Wagner PD, Erickson BK, Kubo K, Hiraga A, Kai M, Yamaya Y, Richardson R, and Seaman J. Equine Vet J 18, Suppl: 82-89, 1995), we hypothesized that splenic contraction also augments diffusive O2 transport in the lung. Therefore, we have measured lung diffusing capacity (DL(CO)) and its components during exercise by a rebreathing technique in six adult foxhounds before and after splenectomy. Splenectomy eliminated exercise-induced polycythemia, associated with a 30% reduction in maximal O2 uptake. At any given pulmonary blood flow, DL(CO) was significantly lower after splenectomy owing to a lower membrane diffusing capacity, whereas pulmonary capillary blood volume changed variably; microvascular recruitment, indicated by the slope of the increase in DL(CO) with respect to pulmonary blood flow, was also reduced. We conclude that splenic contraction enhances both convective and diffusive O2 transport and provides another compensatory mechanism for maintaining alveolar O2 transport in the presence of restrictive lung disease or ambient hypoxia.
To determine whether all-trans retinoic acid (RA) treatment enhances lung function during compensatory lung growth in fully mature animals, adult male dogs (n = 4) received 2 mg x kg(-1) x day(-1) po RA 4 days/wk beginning the day after right pneumonectomy (R-PNX, 55-58% resection). Litter-matched male R-PNX controls (n = 4) received placebo. After 3 mo, transpulmonary pressure (TPP)-lung volume relationship, diffusing capacities for carbon monoxide and nitric oxide, cardiac output, and septal volume (V(tiss-RB)) were measured under anesthesia by a rebreathing technique at two lung volumes. Lung air and tissue volumes (V(air-CT) and V(tiss-CT)) were also measured from high-resolution computerized tomographic (CT) scans at a constant TPP. In RA-treated dogs compared with controls, TPP-lung volume relationships were similar. Diffusing capacities for carbon monoxide and nitric oxide were significantly impaired at a lower lung volume but similar at a high lung volume. Whereas V(tiss-RB) was significantly lower at both lung volumes in RA-treated animals, V(air-CT) and V(tiss-CT) were not different between groups; results suggest uneven distribution of ventilation consistent with distortion of alveolar geometry and/or altered small airway function induced by RA. We conclude that RA does not improve resting pulmonary function during the early months after R-PNX despite histological evidence of its action in enhancing alveolar cellular growth in the remaining lung.
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