Alveolar Structure and Function - Couverture souple

Payne, D. Keith; Wellikoff, Adam

 
9781615045044: Alveolar Structure and Function

Synopsis

In the distal regions of the human lung, one of the most challenging problems facing a large multicellular organism is solved—ensuring an adequate supply of oxygen for aerobic tissue metabolism while removing associated waste products. Conduits for both air and blood converge at the alveolar level to match ventilation with perfusion and thus assure the free diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide. Despite their thin walls and their intimate relationship to the pulmonary capillary bed, the alveolus must present a barrier function robust enough to resist alveolar flooding from the hydrostatic pressures generated by the weight of the lungs and the volume of blood in the pulmonary circuit. The strategic position of the alveolar region and its vast associated capillary network ensure its importance in the synthesis and degradation of a wide range of molecules. Finally, the alveoli have evolved important immune functions vital to protecting the host from a variety of inhaled pollutants and microorganisms. Understanding alveolar structure and function is essential not only to appreciate the elegance of the human lung in its pristine state but also to understand the perturbations that underlay many lung diseases. Table of Contents: Introduction / Historical Perspectives / Lung Development / Structural Anatomy—Conducting Airways to the Alveoli / The Alveolar–Capillary Membrane and Gas Exchange / Fluid and Solute Exchange / Alveolar Defense and Clearance Mechanisms / References / Author Biography

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Présentation de l'éditeur

In the distal regions of the human lung, one of the most challenging problems facing a large multicellular organism is solved—ensuring an adequate supply of oxygen for aerobic tissue metabolism while removing associated waste products. Conduits for both air and blood converge at the alveolar level to match ventilation with perfusion and thus assure the free diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide. Despite their thin walls and their intimate relationship to the pulmonary capillary bed, the alveolus must present a barrier function robust enough to resist alveolar flooding from the hydrostatic pressures generated by the weight of the lungs and the volume of blood in the pulmonary circuit. The strategic position of the alveolar region and its vast associated capillary network ensure its importance in the synthesis and degradation of a wide range of molecules. Finally, the alveoli have evolved important immune functions vital to protecting the host from a variety of inhaled pollutants and microorganisms. Understanding alveolar structure and function is essential not only to appreciate the elegance of the human lung in its pristine state but also to understand the perturbations that underlay many lung diseases. Table of Contents: Introduction / Historical Perspectives / Lung Development / Structural Anatomy—Conducting Airways to the Alveoli / The Alveolar–Capillary Membrane and Gas Exchange / Fluid and Solute Exchange / Alveolar Defense and Clearance Mechanisms / References / Author Biography

Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.