Alveolar nitric oxide (NO) concentration (Fa(NO)), increasingly considered in asthma, is currently interpreted as a reflection of NO production in the alveoli. Recent modeling studies showed that axial molecular diffusion brings NO molecules from the airways back into the alveolar compartment during exhalation (backdiffusion) and contributes to Fa(NO). Our objectives in this study were 1) to simulate the impact of backdiffusion on Fa(NO) and to estimate the alveolar concentration actually due to in situ production (Fa(NO,prod)); and 2) to determine actual alveolar production in stable asthma patients with a broad range of NO bronchial productions. A model incorporating convection and diffusion transport and NO sources was used to simulate Fa(NO) and exhaled NO concentration at 50 ml/s expired flow (Fe(NO)) for a range of alveolar and bronchial NO productions. Fa(NO) and Fe(NO) were measured in 10 healthy subjects (8 men; age 38 +/- 14 yr) and in 21 asthma patients with stable asthma [16 men; age 33 +/- 13 yr; forced expiratory volume during 1 s (FEV(1)) = 98.0 +/- 11.9%predicted]. The Asthma Control Questionnaire (Juniper EF, Buist AS, Cox FM, Ferrie PJ, King DR. Chest 115: 1265-1270, 1999) assessed asthma control. Simulations predict that, because of backdiffusion, Fa(NO) and Fe(NO) are linearly related. Experimental results confirm this relationship. Fa(NO,prod) may be derived by Fa(NO,prod) = (Fa(NO) - 0.08.Fe(NO))/0.92 (Eq. 1). Based on Eq. 1, Fa(NO,prod) is similar in asthma patients and in healthy subjects. In conclusion, the backdiffusion mechanism is an important determinant of NO alveolar concentration. In stable and unobstructed asthma patients, even with increased bronchial NO production, alveolar production is normal when appropriately corrected for backdiffusion.
While airway constriction has been shown to affect exhaled nitric oxide (NO), the mechanisms and location of constricted airways most likely to affect exhaled NO remain obscure. We studied the effects of histamine-induced airway constriction and ventilation heterogeneity on exhaled NO at 50 ml/s (Fe(NO,50)) and combined this with model simulations of Fe(NO,50) changes due to constriction of airways at various depths of the lung model. In 20 normal subjects, histamine induced a 26 +/- 15(SD)% Fe(NO,50) decrease, a 9 +/- 6% forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV(1)) decrease, a 19 +/- 9% mean forced midexpiratory flow between 25% and 75% forced vital capacity (FEF(25-75)) decrease, and a 94 +/- 119% increase in conductive ventilation heterogeneity. There was a significant correlation of Fe(NO,50) decrease with FEF(25-75) decrease (P = 0.006) but not with FEV(1) decrease or with increased ventilation heterogeneity. Simulations confirmed the negligible effect of ventilation heterogeneity on Fe(NO,50) and showed that the histamine-induced Fe(NO,50) decrease was due to constriction, with associated reduction in NO flux, of airways located proximal to generation 15. The model also indicated that the most marked effect of airways constriction on Fe(NO,50) is situated in generations 10-15 and that airway constriction beyond generation 15 markedly increases Fe(NO,50) due to interference with the NO backdiffusion effect. These mechanical factors should be considered when interpreting exhaled NO in lung disease.
Measurements of the helium-cluster breakup and neutron removal cross sections for neutron-rich Be isotopes 10−12,14 Be are presented. These have been studied in the 30 to 42 MeV/u energy range where reaction measurements are proposed to be sensitive to the cluster content of the ground-state wavefunction. These measurements provide a comprehensive survey of the decay processes of the Be isotopes by which the valence neutrons are removed revealing the underlying α-α core-cluster structure. The measurements indicate that clustering in the Be isotopes remains important up to the drip-line nucleus 14 Be and that the dominant helium-cluster structure in the neutron-rich Be isotopes corresponds to α-Xn-α.PACS number(s): 25.60. Dz, 25.70.Mn, 27.20.+n
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