A computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding

Previous models of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system (28,29) have been restricted to the study of fluid and solute exchange between the pulmonary microcirculation, interstitial tissue space, and lymphatics. In severe pulmonary edema the capacities of the lymphatics and tissue space are exc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Heijmans, Franciscus R. C.
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25099
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-25099
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-250992018-01-05T17:42:57Z A computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding Heijmans, Franciscus R. C. Pulmonary alveoli - Data processing Previous models of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system (28,29) have been restricted to the study of fluid and solute exchange between the pulmonary microcirculation, interstitial tissue space, and lymphatics. In severe pulmonary edema the capacities of the lymphatics and tissue space are exceeded. The fluid and solutes entering the interstitium from the circulation will, then, be transported Into the air space. The accumulation of fluid in the air space impairs the diffusion of gas (oxygen and carbon dioxide) between the air space and blood circulation; if this fluid accumulation is excessive a patient's health may be compromised. In this thesis severe pulmonary edema is studied by including the air space as a fourth compartment into the interstitial model developed by Bert and Pinder (29). A computer simulation of the four compartment (alveolar) model was developed on a digital computer. Tests of the model were made to study the effect of the parameters which were introduced into the alveolar model. These parameters include: a filtration coefficient that describes the alveolar membrane fluid conductivity, an extravascular fluid volume that represents the point at which fluid enters the air space, the alveolar fluid pressure at the onset of fluid flow into the air space, and the rate of alveolar fluid pressure change relative to an alveolar fluid volume change. For each case the dynamic response of the exchange system was recorded. In addition, two types of pulmonary edema were simulated: 1) hydrostatically induced edema, and 2) edema induced by changes to the fluid and solute permeability of the porous membrane separating the circulatory and interstitial compartments. Due to the limited data available on the interaction of the air space with the other three compartments of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system, only partial verification of the appropriate range of values of the alveolar model parameters and the predictions of the simulations was possible. The alveolar model developed in this thesis is an initial approximation but appears to provide a satisfactory approach for the inclusion of the air space in the pulmonary microvascular exchange system. Applied Science, Faculty of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of Graduate 2010-05-27T02:16:07Z 2010-05-27T02:16:07Z 1985 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25099 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Pulmonary alveoli - Data processing
spellingShingle Pulmonary alveoli - Data processing
Heijmans, Franciscus R. C.
A computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding
description Previous models of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system (28,29) have been restricted to the study of fluid and solute exchange between the pulmonary microcirculation, interstitial tissue space, and lymphatics. In severe pulmonary edema the capacities of the lymphatics and tissue space are exceeded. The fluid and solutes entering the interstitium from the circulation will, then, be transported Into the air space. The accumulation of fluid in the air space impairs the diffusion of gas (oxygen and carbon dioxide) between the air space and blood circulation; if this fluid accumulation is excessive a patient's health may be compromised. In this thesis severe pulmonary edema is studied by including the air space as a fourth compartment into the interstitial model developed by Bert and Pinder (29). A computer simulation of the four compartment (alveolar) model was developed on a digital computer. Tests of the model were made to study the effect of the parameters which were introduced into the alveolar model. These parameters include: a filtration coefficient that describes the alveolar membrane fluid conductivity, an extravascular fluid volume that represents the point at which fluid enters the air space, the alveolar fluid pressure at the onset of fluid flow into the air space, and the rate of alveolar fluid pressure change relative to an alveolar fluid volume change. For each case the dynamic response of the exchange system was recorded. In addition, two types of pulmonary edema were simulated: 1) hydrostatically induced edema, and 2) edema induced by changes to the fluid and solute permeability of the porous membrane separating the circulatory and interstitial compartments. Due to the limited data available on the interaction of the air space with the other three compartments of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system, only partial verification of the appropriate range of values of the alveolar model parameters and the predictions of the simulations was possible. The alveolar model developed in this thesis is an initial approximation but appears to provide a satisfactory approach for the inclusion of the air space in the pulmonary microvascular exchange system. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Heijmans, Franciscus R. C.
author_facet Heijmans, Franciscus R. C.
author_sort Heijmans, Franciscus R. C.
title A computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding
title_short A computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding
title_full A computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding
title_fullStr A computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding
title_full_unstemmed A computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding
title_sort computer simulation of the pulmonary microvascular exchange system - alveolar flooding
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25099
work_keys_str_mv AT heijmansfranciscusrc acomputersimulationofthepulmonarymicrovascularexchangesystemalveolarflooding
AT heijmansfranciscusrc computersimulationofthepulmonarymicrovascularexchangesystemalveolarflooding
_version_ 1718592706691727360