Neutrophils are normally delayed in transit through the lung microcirculation, relative to the passage of erythrocytes. This sequestration contributes to a pulmonary pool of neutrophils that may relate to the relative inability of neutrophils to deform compared with erythrocytes when in transit in the pulmonary capillaries. A micropore membrane was used to model the human pulmonary microcirculation, in which cell deformability was measured as the pressure developed during filtration of the cells through the membrane at a constant flow. We demonstrated a significant correlation between in vitro deformability and in vivo lung sequestration of indium-111-labeled neutrophils in 10 normal subjects (r = 0.69, P < 0.02). In eight patients with stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, this relationship was not significant (r = -0.2, P > 0.05). Furthermore, in a subject with microscopic pulmonary telangiectasia known to allow significant passage of 30-mu-m microspheres, neutrophils passed through the lungs without delay. Moreover, neutrophils from patients studied acutely with an exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were temporarily less deformable (P < 0.01). These studies confirm that cell deformability is an important determinant of the normal neutrophil sequestration within the lungs. Changes in cell deformability may alter the extent of this sequestration.