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. 1986 Feb;13(1):1-11.
doi: 10.1016/0378-3782(86)90092-7.

Alveolar development in the human fetus and infant

Alveolar development in the human fetus and infant

A A Hislop et al. Early Hum Dev. 1986 Feb.

Abstract

The lungs from 29 infants aged from 29 weeks of gestation to 18 weeks postnatal age were studied using morphometric analysis; total DNA was estimated in 12 of these. Alveoli could first be counted and measured at 29 weeks gestation; with increasing age they became more mature in appearance as the walls elongated and thinned, and they gradually increased in diameter. Lung volume increased 4-fold between 29 weeks and term, and further doubled in the 4 months after birth. Lung volume, alveolar surface area and DNA all increased linearly with age and weight. Alveolar number showed a curvilinear increase with age and DNA, but a linear relationship to body weight. At birth the lungs had an average of 150 million alveoli, half of the expected adult number. There was a wide normal range. The surface area was between 3 and 5 m2 at birth, one twentieth of the adult value.

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