Pulmonary arterial hypertension affects females more frequently than males, and there are known sex-related differences in the lungs. However, normal sex-related differences in pulmonary vascular structure remain incompletely described. We aimed to contrast computed tomography-derived pulmonary vascular volume and its distribution within the lungs of healthy adult females and males. From the CanCOLD Study, we retrospectively identified healthy never-smokers. We analyzed full-inspiration computed tomography images, using vessel and airway segmentation to generate pulmonary vessel volume, vessel counts, and airway counts. Vessels were classified by cross-sectional area >10, 5-10, and <5 mm into bins, with volume summed within each area bin and in total. We included 46 females and 36 males (62 ± 9 years old). Females had lower total lung volume, total airway counts, total vessel counts, and total vessel volume (117 ± 31 vs. 164 ± 28 mL) versus males (all  < 0.001). Females also had lower vessel volume >10 mm (14 ± 8 vs. 27 ± 9 mL), vessel volume 5-10 mm (35 ± 11 vs. 55 ± 10 mL), and vessel volume <5 mm (68 ± 18 vs. 82 ± 19 mL) (all  < 0.001). Normalized to total vessel volume, vessel volume >10 mm (11 ± 4 vs. 16 ± 4%,  < 0.001) and 5-10 mm (30 ± 6 vs. 34 ± 5%,  = 0.001) remained lower in females but vessel volume <5 mm relative to total volume was 18% higher (59 ± 8 vs. 50 ± 7%,  < 0.001). Among healthy older adults, pulmonary vessel volume is distributed into smaller vessels in females versus males.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11391118PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pul2.12436DOI Listing

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