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Airway mucus elasticity

Bronchioles 11-13 8,192 0.8 2.7 44.5 level airways enter the lobules as defined by a strong elastic lobular limiting membrane Not named contain no cartilage, mucus secreting elements, or cilia. Tightly... [Pg.109]

The relation between the viscosity and elasticity of the secretions is one of the determining factors in transport velocity. If the gel phase is in practice the only one really transported, the sol phase creates a low-resistance milieu where the cilia can beat, an environment that is essential for transport in the direction of the upper airways. One of the most important rheological properties of mucus is viscosity. Viscosity is resistance to flow and represents the capacity of a material to absorb energy while it moves. Elasticity is the capacity to store the energy used to move or deform material. The ratio between viscosity and elasticity appears to be an important determinant of the transport rate (6,10). Mucus transport by ciliary beating is influenced by the viscoelastic and surface properties of the mucus. Theoretical models suggest that a decrease in the ratio of viscosity to elasticity can result in an increase in mucociliary transport (13). [Pg.344]


See other pages where Airway mucus elasticity is mentioned: [Pg.511]    [Pg.522]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.644]    [Pg.513]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.1981]    [Pg.105]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.344 ]




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Airway mucus

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