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9.3: Zones of Perfusion

  • Page ID
    34528
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    We now have to consider the relationship of the pressures in these three systems, arterial, alveolar and venous, at different heights of the lung. Many of the following principles have already been dealt with, but we can put them together to look at how they affect perfusion distribution.

    Figure 9.8 shows a schematic of the lung as the arterial vessels (tan, as they carry deoxygenated blood, of course) pass alveoli at different heights in the lung. The venous system (maroon) carries oxygenated blood away. For convenience we divide the lung into zones where the relationship between these pressures changes. So we will start at the apex of the lung in zone 1.

    A figure of a lung broken up into 3 horizontal zones. Zone 1 (top): PA Pa > PV. Zone 2 (middle): Pa > PA >PV. Zone 3 (bottom): Pa > PV > PA." style="width: 766px; height: 522px;" width="766px" height="522px" src="/@api/deki/files/36848/9.8.jpg">

    Figure 9.8: Relationships of alveolar, arterial, and venous pressures down the lung.

    Zone 1: At the top of the lung the arterial pressure is relatively low because this is the furthest vertical distance from the heart. In the same zone, as you know, the alveoli here are extended by the low (more negative) intrapleural pressure at the apex. These extended alveoli tend to compress the surrounding capillaries, and the lack of arterial pressure to push past the extended alveolus means blood flow through capillary beds in zone 1 may be relatively low. It is certainly a pronounced effect in patients undergoing positive pressure ventilation where alveolar pressure may exceed arterial pressure and stop blood flow at the apex altogether. This phenomenon of ventilated but underperfused alveoli is referred to as alveolar dead space, as without adequate perfusion, gas exchange is compromised.

    Zone 2: In zone 2 we are lower down the lung, and at this point arterial pressure is higher (closer proximity to the heart) and the alveoli are less extended, but venous pressure remains less than alveolar pressure. So flow in zone 2 is determined by the difference between arterial and alveolar pressures.

    Zone 3: Dropping further down the lung to the base, the arterial and venous pressure have both risen as the column of fluid (blood) above them is greater at this point, and now both are above the now smaller alveolar pressure (near the base the intrapleural pressure is less negative). Consequently the flow through the capillary bed in zone 3 is determined by the arterial–venous pressure difference, just as it is in the systemic circulation.

    (There can at times be a fourth zone, which appears only at low lung volumes. At low lung volumes tissue at the base of the lung can be compressed, and this compression can collapse the extra-alveolar vessels.)

    Summary

    So when considering flow through a systemic capillary bed we only have to think about the arterial and venous pressures, the pulmonary circulation throws us a curve ball by adding alveolar pressures into the mix that produce these perfusion zones.


    This page titled 9.3: Zones of Perfusion is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Andrew Binks (Virginia Tech Libraries' Open Education Initiative) .