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Anatomy and Physiology of the Airway Circulation

Authors :
John Widdicombe
Source :
American Review of Respiratory Disease. 146:S3-S7
Publication Year :
1992
Publisher :
American Thoracic Society, 1992.

Abstract

Both for the nose and the lower airways there is an extensive subepithelial capillary network. That for the nose is fenestrated, and this is true for the tracheobronchial tree of rats, guinea pigs, and hamsters, and for that of human asthmatics. However, healthy humans, dogs, and sheep have capillaries without fenestrations except for those close to neuroepithelial bodies and submucosal glands. Deeper in the mucosa there is a capacitance system of vessels, conspicuous in the nose but present also in the lower airways of rabbits and sheep and, to a lesser extent, in those of dogs and humans. Both for the nose and the lower airways, parasympathetic nerves are vasodilator, sympathetic nerves are vasoconstrictor, and sensory nerves are able to release dilator neuropeptides. Most inflammatory and immunologic mediators are vasodilator. A conspicuous difference between the nasal and lower airway vasculatures is the presence of arteriovenous anastomoses only in the former. Countercurrent mechanisms also exist in ...

Details

ISSN :
00030805
Volume :
146
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Review of Respiratory Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5dcc8b6d604bd2bb9e551583059e428a