Surfactant-Mediated Airway and Acinar Interactions in a Multi-Scale Model of a Healthy Lung

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Abstract

We present a computational multi-scale model of an adult human lung that combines dynamic surfactant physicochemical interactions and parenchymal tethering between ~16 generations of airways and subtended acini. This model simulates the healthy lung by modeling nonlinear stress distributions from airway/alveolar interdependency. In concert with multi-component surfactant transport processes, this serves to stabilize highly compliant interacting structures. This computational model, with ~10 k degrees of freedom, demonstrates physiological processes in the normal lung such as multi-layer surfactant transport and pressure–volume hysteresis behavior. Furthermore, this model predicts non-equilibrium stress distributions due to compliance mismatches between airway and alveolar structures. This computational model provides a baseline for the exploration of multi-scale interactions of pathological conditions that can further our understanding of disease processes and guide the development of protective ventilation strategies for the treatment of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).

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Ma, H., Fujioka, H., Halpern, D., & Gaver, D. P. (2020). Surfactant-Mediated Airway and Acinar Interactions in a Multi-Scale Model of a Healthy Lung. Frontiers in Physiology, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.00941

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