Alveolar surface forces and lung architecture
- PMID: 11369543
- DOI: 10.1016/s1095-6433(01)00315-4
Alveolar surface forces and lung architecture
Abstract
The entire alveolar surface is lined by a thin fluid continuum. As a consequence, surface forces at the air-liquid interface are operative, which in part are transmitted to the delicate lung tissue. Morphologic and morphometric analyses of lungs show that the alveolar surface forces exert a moulding effect on alveolar tissue elements. In particular, in lungs at low degrees of inflation, equivalent to the volume range of normal breathing, there is a derecruitment of alveolar surface area with increasing surface tensions which reflects equilibrium configurations of peripheral air spaces where the sum of tissue energy and surface energy is minimum. Thus, changes in surface tension alter the recoil pressure of the lung directly and indirectly by deforming lung tissue and hence changing tissue tensions. However, the interplay between tissue and surface forces is rather complex, and there is a marked volume dependence of the shaping influence of surface forces. With increasing lung volumes the tissue forces transmitted by the fiber scaffold of the lung become the predominant factor of alveolar micromechanics: at lung volumes of 80% total lung capacity or more, the alveolar surface area-volume relation is largely independent of surface tension. Most important, within the range of normal breathing, the surface tension, its variations and the associated variations in surface area are small. The moulding power of surface forces also affects the configuration of capillaries, and hence the microcirculation, of free cellular elements such as the alveolar macrophages beneath the surface lining layer, and of the surfaces of the peripheral airways. Still enigmatic is the coupling mechanism between the fluid continua of alveoli and airways which might also be of importance for alveolar clearance. As to the surface active lining layer of peripheral air spaces, which determines alveolar surface tension, its structure and structure-function relationship are still ill-defined owing to persisting problems of film preservation and fixation. Electron micrographs of alveolar tissue, of lining layers of captive bubbles, and scanning force micrographs of surfactant films transferred on mica plates reveal a complex structural pattern which precludes so far the formulation of an unequivocal hypothesis.
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