Organ perfusion during voluntary pulmonary hyperinflation; a magnetic resonance imaging study.
Kasper KyhlIvan DrvisOtto BarakTanja MijacikaThomas EngstrømNiels H SecherZeljko DujicAnte BucaPer Lav MadsenPublished in: American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology (2015)
Pulmonary hyperinflation is used by competitive breath-hold divers and is accomplished by glossopharyngeal insufflation (GPI), which is known to compress the heart and pulmonary vessels, increasing sympathetic activity and lowering cardiac output (CO) without known consequence for organ perfusion. Myocardial, pulmonary, skeletal muscle, kidney, and liver perfusion were evaluated by magnetic resonance imaging in 10 elite breath-hold divers at rest and during moderate GPI. Cardiac chamber volumes, stroke volume, and thus CO were determined from cardiac short-axis cine images. Organ volumes were assessed from gradient echo sequences, and organ perfusion was evaluated from first-pass images after gadolinium injection. During GPI, lung volume increased by 5.2 ± 1.5 liters (mean ± SD; P < 0.001), while spleen and liver volume decreased by 46 ± 39 and 210 ± 160 ml, respectively (P < 0.05), and inferior caval vein diameter by 4 ± 3 mm (P < 0.05). Heart rate tended to increase (67 ± 10 to 86 ± 20 beats/min; P = 0.052) as right and left ventricular volumes were reduced (P < 0.05). Stroke volume (107 ± 21 to 53 ± 15 ml) and CO (7.2 ± 1.6 to 4.2 ± 0.8 l/min) decreased as assessed after 1 min of GPI (P < 0.01). Left ventricular myocardial perfusion maximum upslope and its perfusion index decreased by 1.52 ± 0.15 s(-1) (P < 0.001) and 0.02 ± 0.01 s(-1) (P < 0.05), respectively, without transmural differences. Pulmonary tissue, spleen, kidney, and pectoral-muscle perfusion also decreased (P < 0.05), and yet liver perfusion was maintained. Thus, during pulmonary hyperinflation by GPI, CO and organ perfusion, including the myocardium, as well as perfusion of skeletal muscles, are reduced, and yet perfusion of the liver is maintained. Liver perfusion seems to be prioritized when CO decreases during GPI.
Keyphrases
- contrast enhanced
- left ventricular
- magnetic resonance imaging
- pulmonary hypertension
- skeletal muscle
- heart rate
- heart failure
- diffusion weighted
- computed tomography
- atrial fibrillation
- magnetic resonance
- acute myocardial infarction
- deep learning
- body composition
- convolutional neural network
- pulmonary embolism
- coronary artery disease
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- mitral valve
- ejection fraction
- blood brain barrier
- inferior vena cava
- aortic valve
- vena cava