Applications of applied potential tomography (APT) in respiratory medicine.

Impedance pneumography, electrical impedance measurements of the lung, is a technique which has been widely used to monitor respiration non-invasively and more recently, the onset of pulmonary oedema. Attempts have been made to try to localise the changes in impedance using electrode arrays and electrode guarding. These techniques allow localisation to a particular hemithorax, but the resolution of the majority of the systems remains poor. To assess the performance and possible clinical applications of APT, measurements have been made following increases in lung volume and pulmonary blood volume. During inspiration an increase in both the area and the magnitude of the impedance changes over the area of the lungs was observed. Numerical analysis of the impedance changes in normal subjects reveals a consistently high correlation between the volume of air inspired and the magnitude of the impedance changes. The resolution of the system is sufficient to monitor differences in ventilation in the right and left lung and to measure variations in these levels with posture. Preliminary clinical work suggests that APT may be used to detect ventilatory defects in certain types of lung disease. APT measurements show a decrease in resistivity over the area of the lungs when the pulmonary blood volume is increased by the intravenous infusion of 1.5 litres of isotonic saline. Similar changes in the volume of fluid in the lungs are known to occur in pulmonary oedema. APT measurements of lung impedance may detect the onset of pulmonary oedema in high risk patients.