Effect of gravity on chest wall mechanics.

2002 
Chest wall mechanics was studied in four subjects on changing gravity in the craniocaudal direction (Gz) during parabolic flights. The thorax appears very compliant at 0 Gz: its recoil changes only from −2 to 2 cmH2O in the volume range of 30–70% vital capacity (VC). Increasing Gz from 0 to 1 and 1.8 Gzprogressively shifted the volume-pressure curve of the chest wall to the left and also caused a fivefold exponential decrease in compliance. For lung volume <30% VC, gravity has an inspiratory effect, but this effect is much larger going from 0 to 1 Gz than from 1 to 1.8 Gz. For a volume from 30 to 70% VC, the effect is inspiratory going from 0 to 1 Gz but expiratory from 1 to 1.8 Gz. For a volume greater than ∼70% VC, gravity always has an expiratory effect. The data suggest that the chest wall does not behave as a linear system when exposed to changing gravity, as the effect depends on both chest wall volume and magnitude of Gz.
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