Clinical Consideration for Techniques to Detect and Quantify Blood Flow through Intrapulmonary Arteriovenous Anastomoses: Lessons from Physiological Studies

Abstract

Intrapulmonary arteriovenous anastomoses (IPAVA) are large diameter (>50 μm) vascular conduits, present in >95% of healthy humans. Because IPAVA are large diameter pathways that allow blood flow to bypass the pulmonary capillary network, blood flow through IPAVA (QIPAVA) can permit the transpulmonary passage of particles larger than pulmonary capillaries. IPAVA have been known to exist for over 50 years, but their physiological and clinical significance are still being established; although, currently suggested roles for QIPAVA include allowing emboli to reach the systemic circulation and providing a source of shunt. Studying QIPAVA is an important area of research and as the suggested roles become better established, detecting and quantifying QIPAVA may become significantly more important in the clinic. Several techniques that can be used to quantify and/or detect QIPAVA in animals, ex vivo human/animal lungs, and intact healthy humans; microspheres, radiolabeled macroaggregated albumin particles, and saline contrast echocardiography, are reviewed with limitations and advantages to each. The current body of literature using these techniques to study QIPAVA in animals, ex vivo lungs, and healthy humans has established conditions when QIPAVA is present, such as during exercise or with arterial hypoxemia and conditions when QIPAVA is absent, such as at rest or during exercise breathing 100% O2. Many of these physiological studies have direct application to patient populations and we discuss each of these findings in the context of their potential to influence the clinical utility, and interpretation, of the results from these techniques highlighted in this review.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Feb 01, 2015
Source ID
10.1111/echo.12839

Entities

People

  • Andrew T Lovering
  • Jonathan E. Elliott
  • Joseph W Duke

Organizations

  • American Heart Association
  • American Lung Association
  • Mayo Clinic
  • Medical Research Foundation
  • Ohio University
  • United States Department of Defense
  • University of Oregon

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology
  • Medicine

Readers

  • Aerosol Science/Aerosol Physics
  • Cardiovascular Physiology
  • Theoretical Analysis.