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Featured researches published by John L. Lehr.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1981

Effects of frequency, tidal volume, and lung volume on CO2 elimination in dogs by high frequency (2-30 Hz), low tidal volume ventilation.

Arthur S. Slutsky; Roger D. Kamm; Thomas H. Rossing; Stephen H. Loring; John L. Lehr; Ascher H. Shapiro; R. H. Ingram; Jeffrey M. Drazen

Recent studies have shown that effective pulmonary ventilation is possible with tidal volumes (VT) less than the anatomic dead-space if the oscillatory frequency (f) is sufficiently large. We systematically studied the effect on pulmonary CO2 elimination (VCO2) of varying f (2-30 Hz) and VT (1-7 ml/kg) as well as lung volume (VL) in 13 anesthetized, paralyzed dogs in order to examine the contribution of those variables that are thought to be important in determining gas exchange by high frequency ventilation. All experiments were performed when the alveolar PCO2 was 40 +/- 1.5 mm Hg. In all studies, VCO2 increased monotonically with f at constant VT. We quantitated the effects of f and VT on VCO2 by using the dimensionless equation VCO2/VOSC = a(VT/VTo)b(f/fo)c where: VOSC = f X VT, VTo = mean VT, fo = mean f and a, b, c, are constants obtained by multiple regression. The mean values of a, b, and c for all dogs were 2.12 X 10(-3), 0.49, and 0.08, respectively. The most important variable in determining VCO2 was VOSC; however, there was considerable variability among dogs in the independent effect of VT and f on VCO2, with a doubling of VT at a constant VOSC causing changes in VCO2 ranging from -13 to +110% (mean = +35%). Increasing VL from functional residual capacity (FRC) to the lung volume at an airway opening minus body surface pressure of 25 cm H2O had no significant effect on VCO2.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1981

Tidal Volume and Frequency Dependence of Carbon Dioxide Elimination by High-Frequency Ventilation

Thomas H. Rossing; Arthur S. Slutsky; John L. Lehr; Philip Drinker; Roger D. Kamm; Jeffrey M. Drazen

Six patients with chronic respiratory failure received mechanical ventilation with tidal volumes less than or equal to the dead-space volume, at frequencies of 30 to 900 breaths per minute. The rate of elimination of carbon dioxide from the ventilator system during a brief trial of high-frequency ventilation accurately predicted the long-term effectiveness of a given combination of frequency and tidal volume. Below frequencies of about 200 breaths per minute, the volume of carbon dioxide eliminated from these patients was most strongly related to the product of frequency and tidal volume; at higher frequencies, carbon dioxide elimination was determined by the tidal volume and was independent of frequency. These results suggest that although the effectiveness of high-frequency ventilation is primarily a function of the product of tidal volume and frequency, above a critical frequency the mechanical characteristics of the lung reduce gas transport by limiting the volume transmitted to the periphery of the lung.


Respiration Physiology | 1992

Mechanical independence of wingbeat and breathing in starlings

Robert B. Banzett; Christopher S. Nations; Ning Wang; James P. Butler; John L. Lehr

The pectoral muscles in birds comprise up to a third of the body weight and provide the principal drive to the wing. Their attachment to the sternum suggests that they could compress the thorax and assist ventilation during flight. Most, but not all, birds have an integer ratio relationship between wingbeat and breathing frequency, but no measurements of the respiratory flow associated with the act of wingbeat are available. We recorded respiratory flow and wing timing in three starlings that flew at 22 knots (11 m.s-1) for up to 5 min in a wind tunnel. Triggering on wingbeat, we ensemble averaged flow records for many wingbeats in each flight. Because wingbeats occurred throughout the respiratory cycle, breathing flow tended to average to zero, and a small flow event related to wingbeat emerged. The volume change associated with wingbeat ranged from 3 to 11% of tidal volume, and this is probably an overestimate. We conclude that wingbeat and breathing in starlings are essentially mechanically independent, despite the direct attachment of the locomotor muscles to the thorax.


Science | 1980

Effective pulmonary ventilation with small-volume oscillations at high frequency.

Arthur S. Slutsky; Fm Drazen; R. H. Ingram; Roger D. Kamm; Ascher H. Shapiro; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Stephen H. Loring; John L. Lehr


The American review of respiratory disease | 1991

Pulmonary Surfactant as a Vehicle for Intratracheal Delivery of Technetium Sulfur Colloid and Pentamidine in Hamster Lungs

Virginia S. Kharasch; T. D. Sweeney; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; John L. Lehr; Andrew I. Damokosh; Mary Ellen Avery; Joseph D. Brain


Journal of Applied Physiology | 1993

Geometric hysteresis in pulmonary surface-to-volume ratio during tidal breathing

H. Miki; James P. Butler; Rick A. Rogers; John L. Lehr


Respiration Physiology | 1987

Inspiratory aerodynamic valving in goose lungs depends on gas density and velocity

Robert B. Banzett; James P. Butler; Christopher S. Nations; George M. Barnas; John L. Lehr; James H. Jones


Journal of Applied Physiology | 1985

Photographic measurement of pleural surface motion during lung oscillation

John L. Lehr; James P. Butler; P. A. Westerman; S. L. Zatz; Jeffrey M. Drazen


The American review of respiratory disease | 1984

Effect of Posture on Upper and Lower Rib Cage Motion and Tidal Volume during Diaphragm Pacing1,2

J. Mead; Robert B. Banzett; John L. Lehr; Stephen H. Loring; O'Cain Cf


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 1995

The avian lung: is there an aerodynamic expiratory valve?

R. E. Brown; C. E. Kovacs; James P. Butler; Ning Wang; John L. Lehr; Robert B. Banzett

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Thomas H. Rossing

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Roger D. Kamm

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Stephen H. Loring

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Ascher H. Shapiro

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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