Faculty
Charles A. Hales, M.D.
Specialty: Pulmonary Medicine
Massachusetts General Hospital
Bulfinch 1-148
55 Fruit Street
Boston, MA 02114
Publications
The following is a list of recent publications for which this Partners Asthma Center physician has been cited as an author in PubMed databases. Study abstracts have been provided for your convenience.
Mascarenhas, M. M., R. M. Day, et al. (2003). "Low molecular weight hyaluronan from stretched lung enhances IL-8 expression." Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol.
Mechanical ventilation has been shown to cause ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI), probably by overdistending or stretching the lung. Hyaluronan (HA), a component of the extracellular matrix (ECM), in low molecular weight (LMW) forms has been shown to induce cytokine production. LMW HA is produced by hyaluronan synthase 3 (HAS 3). We found that HAS 3 mRNA expression was upregulated and LMW HA accumulated in an animal model of VILI. We hypothesized that stretch-induced LMW HA production that causes cytokine release in VILI was dependent on HAS 3 mRNA expression. We explored this hypothesis with in vitro lung cell stretch. Cell stretch induced HAS 3 mRNA expression and LMW HA in fibroblasts. Non-specific inhibitors of HAS 3 (cyclohexamide and dexamethasone), a non-specific inhibitor of protein tyrosine kinases, (genistein) and a janus kinase 2 inhibitor (AG490), blocked stretch-induced HAS 3 expression and synthesis of LMW HA. Stretch-induced LMW HA from fibroblasts caused a significant dose-dependent increase in IL-8 production both in static and stretched epithelial cells. These results indicated that de novo synthesis of LMW HA was induced in lung fibroblasts by stretch via tyrosine kinase signaling pathways, and may play a role in augmenting induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines in VILI.
Longas, M. O., H. G. Garg, et al. (2003). "Heparin antiproliferative activity on bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells requires both N-acetylation and N-sulfonation." Carbohydr Res 338(3): 251-6.
The antiproliferative activity of Heparin (HP) on bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (BPASMC) in vitro requires both N-acetylation and N-sulfonation. This was demonstrated by quantifying the relative N-acetylation of three commercial heparins of known antiproliferative activities, using their Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) band areas at 1381-1378 and 1320-1317 cm(-1), which combined resulted in 1.0, 1.0 and 1.3 cm2 for Choay, Elkins-Sinn and Upjohn HP, respectively. These results show that Upjohn HP, which is at least 44% more antiproliferative than the other two, is 30% more N-acetylated. Upjohn HP was also N-desulfonated chemically, and its antiproliferative activity was determined. Its total sulfonate (--SO 3 -) content (O- and N-sulfonate) was quantified using the FTIR band area at 1260-1200 cm(-1) for the S=O stretching; a drop in sulfonate content from 21.87% (w/w) before N-desulfonation to 16.51% (w/w) after N-desulfonation, resulted in a 67% decrease in its inhibitory potency. In addition to the requirement that approximately 24% of the sulfonate content be bonded to N, the data show a direct correlation between the extent of Upjohn HP N-acetylation and its antiproliferative activity on BPASMC.
Cindhuchao, N., D. A. Quinn, et al. (2003). "Heparin inhibits SMC growth in the presence of human and fetal bovine serum." Biochem Biophys Res Commun 302(1): 84-8.
Heparin (HP) has antiproliferative as well as anticoagulant properties, but not all HP preparations are equally antiproliferative. A recent report found that HP lost its total antiproliferative activity when fetal bovine serum (FBS) was replaced with human serum (HS) in culture media. This observation led to the investigation of our most potent antiproliferative Upjohn HP preparation effects on bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMC) and systemic SMC growth stimulated in the presence of either FBS or HS. Bovine PASMC, human PASMC, and bovine aortic SMC were treated with 10 microg/ml Upjohn HP in either 15% FBS or 15% HS and the cell number was determined by a Coulter counter. We found that Upjohn HP significantly inhibited bovine PASMC and systemic SMC proliferation in both HS and FBS. The antiproliferative activity of the above HP preparation in HS may lead to an effective treatment of pulmonary vascular and systemic remodeling.
Choi, W. I., D. A. Quinn, et al. (2003). "Systemic microvascular leak in an in vivo rat model of ventilator-induced lung injury." Am J Respir Crit Care Med 167(12): 1627-32.
Positive pressure mechanical ventilation has significant systemic effects, but the systemic effects associated with ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) are unexplored. We hypothesized that VILI would cause systemic microvascular leak that is dependent on nitric oxide synthase (NOS) expression. Rats were ventilated with room air at 85 breaths/minute for 2 hours with either VT 7 or 20 ml/kg. Kidney microvascular leak, which was assessed by measuring 24-hour urine protein and Evans blue dye, was used as a marker of systemic microvascular leak. A significant microvascular leak occurred in both lung and kidney with large VT (20 ml/kg) ventilation. Injection of 0.9% NaCl corrected the hypotension and the decreased cardiac output related to large VT, but it did not attenuate microvascular leak of lung and kidney. Serum vascular endothelial growth factor was significantly elevated in large VT groups. Endothelial NOS expression significantly increased in the lung and kidney tissue with large VT ventilation but not inducible NOS. The NOS inhibitor, N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, attenuated the microvascular leak of lung and kidney and the proteinuria with large VT ventilation. Endothelial NOS may mediate the systemic microvascular leak of the present model of VILI.
Willey-Courand, D. B., R. S. Harris, et al. (2002). "Alterations in regional ventilation, perfusion, and shunt after smoke inhalation measured by PET." J Appl Physiol 93(3): 1115-22.
Regional changes in ventilation and perfusion occurring in the early hours after smoke inhalation injury were evaluated through the use of positron emission tomography. Five lambs were imaged before and 1, 2, and 4 h after receiving 100 breaths of cotton smoke. Utilizing a recently developed model of (13)N tracer kinetics (3), we evaluated changes in ventilation, perfusion, shunt, and regional gas content in nondependent, middle, and dependent lung zones. The data demonstrated a progressive development of regional shunt in dependent (dorsal) regions in which perfusion remained the highest throughout the study. These findings, together with decreasing regional ventilation and fractional gas content in the dependent regions, correlated with decreasing arterial Pa(O(2)) values over the course of the study. A negative correlation between regional shunt fraction and regional gas content in dependent and middle regions suggests that shunt was caused by progressive alveolar derecruitment or flooding.
Quinn, D. A., R. K. Moufarrej, et al. (2002). "Interactions of lung stretch, hyperoxia, and MIP-2 production in ventilator-induced lung injury." J Appl Physiol 93(2): 517-25.
The use of positive pressure mechanical ventilation can cause ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). We hypothesized that hyperoxia in combination with large tidal volumes (VT) would accentuate noncardiogenic edema and neutrophil infiltration in VILI and be dependent on stretch-induced macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2) production. In rats ventilated with VT 20 ml/kg, there was pulmonary edema formation that was significantly increased by hyperoxia. Total lung neutrophil infiltration and MIP-2 in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid were significantly elevated, in animals exposed to high VT both on room air (RA) and with hyperoxia. Hyperoxia markedly augmented the migration of neutrophils into the alveoli. Anti-MIP-2 antibody blocked migration of neutrophils into the alveoli in RA by 51% and with hyperoxia by 65%. We concluded that neutrophil migration into the alveoli was dependent on stretch-induced MIP-2 production. Hyperoxia significantly increased edema formation and neutrophil migration into the alveoli with VT 20 ml/kg, although BAL MIP-2 levels were nearly identical to VT 20 ml/kg with RA, suggesting that other mechanisms may be involved in hyperoxia-augmented neutrophil alveolar content in VILI.
Garg, H. G., N. Cindhuchao, et al. (2002). "Heparin oligosaccharide sequence and size essential for inhibition of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell proliferation." Carbohydr Res 337(21-23): 2359-64.
Heparin has a wide range of important biological activities including inhibition of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell proliferation. To determine the minimum size of the heparin glycosaminoglycan chain essential for antiproliferative activity, porcine intestinal mucosal heparin was partially depolymerized with heparinase and fractionated to give oligosaccharides of different sizes. The structure of these oligosaccharides was fully characterized by 1D and 2D 1H NMR spectroscopy. These oligosaccharides were assayed for antiproliferative effects on cultured bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs). The tetrasaccharide (4-mer) exhibited no heparin-like activity. Decasaccharides (10-mers) and dodecasaccharides (12-mers) displayed a reduced level of activity when compared to full-length heparin. Little effect on activity was observed in deca- and dodecasaccharides with one less 2-O-sulfo group. The 14-, 16-, and 18-mers showed comparable growth-inhibition effects on PAMSC as porcine intestinal mucosal heparin. These data suggest that a 14-mer is the minimum size of oligosaccharide that is essential for full heparin-like antiproliferative activity. Since the 14- to 18-mers have no 3-O-sulfo groups in their glucosamine residues, their full activity confirms that these 3-O-sulfonated glucosamine residues, which are required for heparin’s anticoagulant activity, are not an essential requirement for antiproliferative activity.
Hales, C. A., H. K. Du, et al. (2001). "Aquaporin channels may modulate ventilator-induced lung injury." Respir Physiol 124(2): 159-66.
Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome is a disease with functional lung heterogeneity and thus a ventilator-delivered breath may over-distend non-involved areas. In rats we examined ventilator-delivered tidal volume (TV) breaths of 7 and 20 ml/kg on lung water as evidence of lung injury. We examined the role of aquaporins on ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) by infusing HgCl(2) which inhibits aquaporins by binding cysteine. Wet to dry lung weight ratio (W/D) as evidence of lung water was 4.47+/-0.1 SEM in controls, 4.6+/-0.1 and 5.5+/-0.2 (P<0.05) in rats ventilated at 7 and 20 ml/kg, respectively. Pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) rose from 23+/-1 to 26+/-1 mmHg (P<0.05, n=7) and cardiac output fell from 104+/-2 to 67+/-3 ml/min (P<0.05) in rats ventilated at 20 ml/kg. Left ventricular end diastolic pressure (n=3) was unchanged. Evans Blue dye, an albumin marker, increased from a control 37+/-11 to 97+/-41 mg/g wet lung in TV 20 rats (P<0.05). HgCl(2) infused slowly by tail vein did not significantly raise PAP, but did increase W/D to 6+/-0.2 (P<0.05) in rats ventilated at 20 ml/kg but not at 7 ml/kg. Equimolar cysteine infusions prevented the HgCl(2) from increasing the W/D above that seen with TV 20 ml/kg. Thus ventilation with TV of 20 ml/kg produced a protein-rich lung edema. Aquaporin channels may have a protective effect in VILI.
Mandel, J., E. J. Mark, et al. (2000). "Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease." Am J Respir Crit Care Med 162(5): 1964-73.
Garg, H. G., B. T. Thompson, et al. (2000). "Structural determinants of antiproliferative activity of heparin on pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells." Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 279(5): L779-89.
In addition to its anticoagulant properties, heparin (HP), a complex polysaccharide covalently linked to a protein core, inhibits proliferation of several cell types including pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs). Commercial lots of HP exhibit varying degrees of antiproliferative activity on PASMCs that may due to structural differences in the lots. Fractionation of a potent antiproliferative HP preparation into high and low molecular weight components does not alter the antiproliferative effect on PASMCs, suggesting that the size of HP is not the major determinant of this biological activity. The protein core of HP obtained by cleaving the carbohydrate-protein linkage has no growth inhibition on PASMCs, demonstrating that the antiproliferative activity resides in the glycosaminoglycan component. Basic sugar residues of glucosamine can be replaced with another basic sugar, i.e., galactosamine, without affecting growth inhibition of PASMCs. N-sulfonate groups on these sugar residues of HP are not essential for growth inhibition. However, O-sulfonate groups on both sugar residues are essential for the antiproliferative activity on PASMCs. In whole HP, in contrast to an earlier finding based on a synthetic pentasaccharide of HP, 3-O-sulfonation is not critical for the antiproliferative activity against PASMCs. The amounts and distribution of sulfonate groups on both sugar residues of the glycosaminoglycan chain are the major determinant of antiproliferative activity.
Efimova, O., A. B. Volokhov, et al. (2000). "Ligation of the bronchial artery in sheep attenuates early pulmonary changes following exposure to smoke." J Appl Physiol 88(3): 888-93.
Smoke inhalation can produce acute pulmonary edema. Previous studies have shown that the bronchial arteries are important in acute pulmonary edema occurring after inhalation of a synthetic smoke containing acrolein, a common smoke toxin. We hypothesized that inhalation of smoke from burning cotton, known to contain acrolein, would produce in sheep acute pulmonary edema that was mediated by the bronchial circulation. We reasoned that occluding the bronchial arteries would eliminate smoke-induced pulmonary edema, whereas occlusion of the pulmonary artery would not. Smoke inhalation increased lung lymph flow from baseline from 2.4 +/- 0.7 to 5.6 +/- 1.2 ml/0.5 h at 30 min (P < 0.05) to 9.1 +/- 1 ml/0.5 h at 4 h (P < 0.05). Bronchial artery ligation diminished and delayed the rise in lymph flow with baseline at 2.8 +/- 0.7 ml/0.5 h rising to 3.1 +/- 0. 8 ml/0.5 h at 30 min to 6.5 +/- 1.5 ml/0.5 h at 240 min (P < 0.05). Wet-to-dry ratio was 4.1 +/- 0.2 in control, 5.1 +/- 0.3 in smoke inhalation (P < 0.05), and 4.4 +/- 0.4 in bronchial artery ligation plus smoke-inhalation group. Smoke inhalation after occlusion of the right pulmonary artery resulted in a wet-to-dry ratio after 4 h in the right lung of 5.5 +/- 0.8 (P < 0.05 vs. control) and in the left nonoccluded lung of 5.01 +/- 0.7 (P < 0.05). Thus the bronchial arteries may be major contributors to acute pulmonary and airway edema following smoke inhalation because the edema occurs in the lung with the pulmonary artery occluded but not in the lungs with bronchial arteries ligated.
Tapson, V. F., B. A. Carroll, et al. (1999). "The diagnostic approach to acute venous thromboembolism. Clinical practice guideline. American Thoracic Society." Am J Respir Crit Care Med 160(3): 1043-66.
Quinn, D. A., R. B. Fogel, et al. (1999). "D-dimers in the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism." Am J Respir Crit Care Med 159(5 Pt 1): 1445-9.
The aim of this study was to determine if the absence of circulating D-dimers, as determined by latex agglutination assays, can correctly exclude the presence of pulmonary embolism using pulmonary angiography as the diagnostic endpoint. Blood samples were obtained prospectively at the time of angiography for suspicion of acute pulmonary embolism. Plasma was assayed for D-dimer by five different latex agglutination assays. Angiographic evidence of pulmonary emboli was found in 34% (35/ 103) of patients. The latex agglutination assays had sensitivities of 97 to 100% and specificities of 19 to 29%. The negative predictive value was 94 to 100%. However, a negative D-dimer was rare in patients with recent surgery, malignancy, or total bilirubin > 34 micromol/L (> 2 mg/dl). In 31 patients suspected of pulmonary emboli but without these confounding factors, the five D-dimer assays were negative in 46 to 55% of patients with normal pulmonary angiograms. The negative predictive value in these patients was 100% by all five latex agglutination assays tested. The latex agglutination assays for D-dimer, when the pulmonary angiogram is used as the diagnostic endpoint and in the absence of recent surgery, malignancy, or liver disease, appears to be a clinically useful test in the diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism.
Quinn, D., A. Tager, et al. (1999). "Stretch-induced mitogen-activated protein kinase activation and interleukin-8 production in type II alveolar cells." Chest 116(1 Suppl): 89S-90S.
Garg, H. G., P. A. Joseph, et al. (1999). "Effect of fully sulfated glycosaminoglycans on pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell proliferation." Arch Biochem Biophys 371(2): 228-33.
Fully sulfated heparin and other glycosaminoglycans, namely heparan, chondroitin, and dermatan sulfates, and hyaluronan have been prepared by using sulfur trioxide under mild chemical conditions. All these derivatives were assayed for antiproliferative activity on cultured bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (BPASMCs). No appreciable difference was found between heparin and fully sulfated heparin. Chondroitin and dermatan sulfates actually stimulated BPASMCs growth but full sulfonation made them strongly antiproliferative. Native hyaluronan was not antiproliferative but became strongly so after sulfonation. Neither acharan sulfate nor N-sulfoacharan sulfate had any antiproliferative activity. This suggests that O-sulfonation of the polysaccharide is critical for antiproliferative activity, whereas N-sulfonation of glucosamine residues is not.
Fukuda, T., D. K. Kim, et al. (1999). "Increased group IV cytosolic phospholipase A2 activity in lungs of sheep after smoke inhalation injury." Am J Physiol 277(3 Pt 1): L533-42.
Increased phospholipase A2 (PLA2) activity was measured in cytosolic fractions of lungs from sheep exposed to smoke from burning cotton or to synthetic smoke consisting of carbon and acrolein, a cotton smoke toxin. Three peaks of PLA2 activity were identified by heparin-Sepharose chromatography. The heparin-nonbinding PLA2 activity was twofold higher in the extracts from lungs exposed to smoke than in normal lungs. This activity was identified as the group IV 85-kDa cytosolic PLA2 (cPLA2). The activities of the forms of PLA2 that bound to heparin did not change after smoke exposure. Those activities showed a pH optimum of 9.0, required a millimolar Ca2+ concentration for full activity, and were inhibited by 5 mM dithiothreitol. One activity eluted at an NaCl concentration typical for group Ib and V PLA2 and had the expected substrate specificity. The other form of lung PLA2 that bound heparin was a group II PLA2. Lung myeloperoxidase activity increased progressively with increased exposure to smoke. cPLA2 was identified in sheep neutrophils. With 30 breaths of smoke exposure, there was an increase in cPLA2 activity without a difference in immunoreactivity on Western blot, indicating that the increased activity was not due to increased amounts of protein. In conclusion, smoke induces increases in resident lung cell cPLA2 activity that is likely responsible for eicosanoid production, leading to lung inflammation and bronchoconstriction.
Cockrill, B. A. and C. A. Hales (1999). "Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis." Annu Rev Med 50: 303-16.
Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) is a syndrome seen in patients with asthma and cystic fibrosis. It is characterized by chronic colonization of the airways with a ubiquitous fungus, Aspergillus fumigatus. The clinical expression of ABPA results from the complex interaction of chronic colonization of the airways with A fumigatus, host factors allowing this colonization, and the host’s genetically determined immune response. Clinically the syndrome is characterized by recurrent episodes of wheezing, mucus production, pulmonary infiltrates, and elevated levels of serum IgE. Many patients develop central bronchiectasis, and a subset will go on to endstage fibrotic lung disease. It is thought that treatment will prevent this progression. The mainstay of therapy remains oral corticosteroids.
Quinn, D. A., H. K. Du, et al. (1998). "Amiloride analogs inhibit chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension." Am J Respir Crit Care Med 157(4 Pt 1): 1263-8.
Na+/H+ exchange regulation of intracellular pH may play a permissive role in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell (PASM) proliferation. Our laboratory has demonstrated that dimethyl amiloride (DMA), an amiloride derivative with enhanced selectivity as an inhibitor of the Na+/H+ antiporter, can inhibit bovine PASM proliferation in vitro. We hypothesized that DMA would inhibit development of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension by interfering with PASM growth in vivo. Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to 10% O2 for 14 d without (n 9) or with (n = 7) DMA continuous infusion 3 mg/ kg/d. The animals treated with DMA had significant reductions in pulmonary artery pressure and total pulmonary vascular resistance index (TPVRI) when compared with hypoxic control rats (p < 0.05). Pulmonary vascular remodeling was significantly reduced in animals treated with DMA as measured by percent wall thickness and percentage of thick-walled intra-acinous vessels (p < 0.05). We used a second Na+/H+ exchange inhibitor, ethylisopropyl amiloride (EIPA, 3 mg/kg/d, n = 9), and found similar reductions in pulmonary artery pressure, TPVRI, and pulmonary vascular remodeling. Polycythemia during hypoxia was unchanged by treatment with DMA or EIPA. In conclusion, despite the hypertensive effects of polycythemia, DMA and EIPA can significantly reduce pulmonary vascular remodeling induced by chronic hypoxia.
Quinn, D., H. K. Du, et al. (1998). "Effect of dimethyl amiloride on chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in rats." Chest 114(1 Suppl): 69S-70S.
Lee, S. L., W. W. Wang, et al. (1997). "Inhibitory effect of heparin on serotonin-induced hyperplasia and hypertrophy of smooth muscle cells." Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 17(1): 78-83.
Serotonin (5-HT) produces both hyperplastic and hypertrophic effects on smooth muscle cell (SMC) in culture. Heparin is known to inhibit serum-induced hyperplasia of SMC but has not been previously tested on the stimulatory effect of 5-HT on SMC. Our present data show that at 24 h heparin inhibited by 50% the stimulation of 3H-thymidine incorporation into bovine pulmonary artery SMC and at 7 days totally reversed both cellular proliferation and enlargement of SMC produced by 1 microM 5-HT. Heparin failed to alter 5-HT uptake by SMC, but inhibited the stimulation of tyrosine phosphorylation of GTPase-activating protein, a proposed intermediate in the 5-HT stimulatory process. Thus heparin inhibits both hyperplastic and hypertrophic effects of 5-HT on SMC, perhaps through the inhibition of a phosphorylated intermediate protein.
Joseph, P. A., H. G. Garg, et al. (1997). "Influence of molecular weight, protein core and charge of native heparin fractions on pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell proliferation." Biochem Biophys Res Commun 241(1): 18-23.
Heparin macromolecules have been shown to inhibit cultured pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell proliferation in vitro and prevent hypoxic vascular remodeling in vivo. In an attempt to understand the structural determinants of heparin’s antiproliferative properties, we have fractionated an antiproliferative preparation of commercial heparin into low and high molecular weight fractions. Then the high molecular weight heparin fraction was further fractionated on a DEAE-cellulose column by charge density eluting with 0 - 1 M NaCl linear gradient. The heparin protein peptides were both removed and isolated. These heparin fractions were assayed for antiproliferative effects on cultured bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells. No appreciable differences were found among high and low molecular weight heparin fractions The core peptides showed no antiproliferative activity. However, higher charge density fraction was less antiproliferative.
Hales, C. A., T. H. Elsasser, et al. (1997). "TNF-alpha in smoke inhalation lung injury." J Appl Physiol 82(5): 1433-7.
Adult respiratory distress syndrome is a major cause of morbidity in fire victims. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha(TNF-alpha) is edematogenic and has been associated with the etiology of other forms of adult respiratory distress syndrome. In the sheep lymph fistula model, we measured TNF-alpha after 48 (n = 7) or 128 (n = 3) breaths of cotton smoke and compared this with sham controls (n = 5) or controls in which left atrial pressure was elevated to 20 mmHg (n = 5) to increase lymph flow in the absence of inflammation. Smoke induced a rise in lymph flow and pulmonary arterial pressure with either no fall in lymph-to-plasma protein ratio (128 breaths) or a modest fall in lymph-to-plasma protein ratio (48 breaths), consistent with a change in microvascular permeability as well as a rise in microvascular pressure. Lymph concentration of TNF-alpha fell in both groups, although lymph flux (concentration x flow) transiently rose in both. In neither case did TNF-alpha flux exceed that induced by left atrial pressure elevation. TNF-alpha was detectable in only one out of five sheep in alveolar lavage. Thus, by utilizing a sensitive and specific radioimmunoassay, we were unable to demonstrate a role for TNF-alpha in smoke-induced microvascular lung injury in sheep.
Quinn, D. A., C. G. Dahlberg, et al. (1996). "The role of Na+/H+ exchange and growth factors in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell proliferation." Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 14(2): 139-45.
Chronic hypoxia produces pulmonary hypertension, in part because of hypertrophy and hyperplasia of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PA SMC). Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF) have been shown to stimulate SMC proliferation and may be involved in these vascular changes. Both factors cause a rise in intracellular pH (pHi) in systemic vascular SMC through stimulation of the Na+/H+ exchanger, an event that has been thought to be permissive, allowing cell proliferation in response to the growth factor. The present studies examined the possibility that the activation of Na+/H+ exchange is involved in the PA SMC mitogenic response to these growth factors. Na+/H+ exchange activity was assessed by monitoring pHi in cultured cells using the pH-sensitive dye, 2'7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF). PDGF (60 ng/ml) exposure led to a marked activation of Na+/H+ exchange, evidenced by a rise in pHi (mean +/- SEM) of 0.20 +/- 0.03 pH units (n = 5, P < 0.05). EGF (60 ng/ml) exposure produced a rise in pHi of 0.27 +/- 0.03 pH units (n = 5, P < 0.05). Dimethyl amiloride (DMA, 50 microM), a competitive inhibitor of Na+/H+ exchange, blocked the pH response to PDGF and EGF. PA SMC showed a proliferative response when exposed to PDGF and EGF which was attenuated by 50 microM DMA (n = 6). Thus, activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger may be important in pulmonary cell signaling in response to growth factors as it has been found to be in systemic vessels.
Joseph, P. M., M. L. Witten, et al. (1996). "The effects of chronic sidestream cigarette smoke exposure on eicosanoid production by tracheal epithelium." Exp Lung Res 22(3): 317-35.
Environmental exposure to sidestream cigarette smoke (SSCS) has been associated with an increased incidence of pulmonary infection and bronchospasm. Chronic exposure to SSCS could modify the release of bronchoreactive eicosanoids by tracheal epithelium, the site of initial contact by lung with inhaled toxins. To assess this possibility, New Zealand white rabbits were placed in an environmental chamber flushed with 3 L of SSCS, 15 min/day for 20 days. Eighteen hours after the last exposure the animals were sacrificed and the tracheas were explanted. At 7 days, the epithelial cell outgrowths were exposed to media containing endotoxin (10 micrograms/mL) or acrolein (50 microM), an aldehyde commonly found in smoke, or to control media. After a 2-h exposure, media were assayed for eicosanoids by radioimmunoassay. PGE2 was produced in epithelium from normal animals (5.7 +/- 1.3 ng/10(6) cells), and was not significantly different in SSCS-exposed epithelium. When incubated in medium containing acrolein, PGE2 production increased significantly in SSCS-exposed epithelium (14.9 +/- 2.5, p < .05) but not in control groups. Endotoxin also increased PGE2 production in SSCS-exposed cells (12.6 +/- 3.3 ng/10(6), p < .05). Baseline production of 6-keto PGF1 alpha was 10.8 +/- 3.2 ng/10(6) cells in non-SSCS controls and did not change significantly in these cells with the addition of endotoxin or acrolein. In acrolein plus SSCS-exposed cells, 6-keto PGF1 alpha increased, in a dose-dependent manner, to 88.1 +/- 26.1 ng/10(6) (p < .05 compared to all normals, SSCS-exposed controls, and SSCS plus LPS). TxB2 release in control, non-SSCS-exposed cells was 13.3 +/- 2.8 ng/10(6) cells and was significantly increased (P < .05) only in the SSCS plus acrolein group (60.7 +/- 16.2 ng/10(6) cells). The results indicate that even brief, recurrent exposure to SSCS can change the production of cyclooxygenase products, particularly PGE2, 6- keto PGF1 alpha, and TxB2. This may reflect an altered ability of SSCS-exposed tracheal epithelium to respond to environmental (e.g., acrolein) or bacterial (e.g., endotoxin) insults.
Herlihy, J. P., M. W. Vermeulen, et al. (1996). "Human alveolar macrophages prevent apoptosis in polymorphonuclear leukocytes." Am J Physiol 271(5 Pt 1): L681-7.
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) are recruited to the lungs to defend against injury and infection. However, PMN undergo apoptosis, thereby losing functional ability within hours, and die with lysis soon thereafter unless they receive specific signals preventing this phenomenon. We hypothesized that alveolar macrophages (AM) could provide these signals. Therefore AM, obtained through bronchoalveolar lavage of healthy volunteers (n = 9), were cultured for 24 h, after which the AM conditioned media (AM-CM) were removed. Freshly isolated PMN, which showed no apoptosis, were suspended in AM-CM, as well as in unconditioned media (UM), and followed over 48 h for apoptosis and survival. In eight of nine patients, AM-CM contained tumor necrosis factor (TNF), which modestly delayed AM apoptosis so that the percentage of PMN apoptotic at 24 h was 77 +/- 6% in AM-CM compared with 91 +/- 2% in UM (P < 0.05). In one patient, urticaria developed early in the lavage, and this subject’s AM-CM profoundly prevented apoptosis of PMN (to 10% at 24 h). PMN survival in this patient was similarly enhanced, so that at 48 h of culture it was 60%, compared with 45 +/- 8% in AM-CM and 30 +/- 6% in UM (P < 0.05 UM vs. AM-CM). Granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), in addition to TNF-alpha, partly accounted for this medium’s activity. Thus AM can delay apoptosis in PMN through production of TNF-alpha and in some cases by GM-CSF. When activated in vivo by conditions such as an allergic reaction, AM can rapidly and profoundly suppress PMN apoptosis.
Garg, H. G., P. A. Joseph, et al. (1996). "Antiproliferative role of 3-O-sulfate glucosamine in heparin on cultured pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells." Biochem Biophys Res Commun 224(2): 468-73.
Heparin macromolecules inhibit vascular remodeling associated with hypoxic pulmonary hypertension. Heparin’s antiproliferative effect on smooth muscle cells, based on studies of synthetic pentasaccharide fragments, has been attributed to 3-O-sulfate on the internal glucosamine. To determine the role of 3-O-sulfation in smooth muscle cell growth, we treated three heparins of varying potency with heparitinases I and II, which degrade heparin fragments containing 3-O-sulfate on the glucosamine residue to delta-tetrasaccharides only. Our most antiproliferative heparin gave the least amount of delta-tetrasaccharides. This heparin was then fractionated according to degree of sulfation using ETOH precipitation. Again we found no antiproliferative difference between the highly sulfated fractions and those with a lesser degree of sulfation. These studies suggest that 3-O-sulfate of glucosamine residue is not critical in whole heparins for antiproliferative activity.
Dahlberg, C. G., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1996). "Differential effect of three commercial heparins on Na+/H+ exchange and growth of PASMC." Am J Physiol 270(2 Pt 1): L260-5.
Heparin preparations vary in chemical content and in antiproliferative activity for pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMC). Intracellular alkalinization via stimulation of the Na+/H+ antiporter appears to be a permissive event for proliferation of PASMC. We wondered whether the variable effect of heparin preparations on PASMC growth might be due to different degrees of inhibition of the Na+/H+ antiporter and whether variations in chemical formulation might correlate with the inhibition. Fluorescent microscopy of bovine PASMC was done using a dye with which fluorescence varies directly with intracellular pH (pHi). Bovine PASMC were preincubated with three heparin preparations previously shown to vary in antiproliferative activity, at 1.0 microgram/ml for 24 h. Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF; 60 ng/ml) on PASMC without heparin resulted in a rise in pHi of 0.27 +/- 0.02 pH units. The rise in pH units in heparin-treated PASMC was 0.34 +/- 0.03 with Choay, 0.21 +/- 0.02 with Elkins-Sinn, and 0.07 +/- 0.02 with Upjohn (+/-SE; all P < 0.05; n = 5). Upjohn heparin incubation for as little as 15 min still impeded the rise in pH induced by PDGF. Heparin did not block the Na+/H+ exchanger directly, as it still restored pHi in response to an acid load. Compared with PASMC proliferation induced by 60 ng/ml PDGF, 1 microgram/ml of Choay, Elkins-Sinn, and Upjohn heparin produced -4 +/- 7.4, 1.4 +/- 4.8, and 48 +/- 2.2% inhibition of PDGF control, respectively (P < 0.05 for Upjohn compared with PDGF and Choay). The heparins varied in protein content and amino acid composition. However, amino acid and glucosamine composition, total sulfation, and extent of 3-O-sulfation did not predict their activity. Thus inhibition of PDGF activation of the Na+/H+ antiporter by a given heparin preparation correlated well with its ability to inhibit PASMC proliferation.
Silverman, E. S., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1995). "Na+/H+ exchange in pulmonary artery smooth muscle from spontaneously hypertensive and Wistar-Kyoto rats." Am J Physiol 269(5 Pt 1): L673-80.
Na+/H+ exchanger regulation of intracellular pH (pHi) may play a key permissive role in the mitogen-induced vascular smooth muscle cell growth that occurs in systemic and pulmonary vascular remodeling. Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) have increased Na+/H+ exchange in systemic vessels as well as greater systemic vascular remodeling compared with normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). In contrast to WKY, SHR demonstrate only mild pulmonary hypertension and no increased remodeling to hypoxia compared with WKY. We therefore wondered whether Na+/H+ exchange in pulmonary artery smooth muscle (PASM) of SHR might not be elevated compared with WKY. Baseline pHi, Vmax, pK0.5, and Hill coefficient were compared in 12- to 14-wk-old SHR and WKY PASM and aortic smooth muscle (AoSM) segments by ratio fluorescence spectroscopy. The Vmax, pK0.5, and Hill coefficient were significantly increased in SHR AoSM segments compared with WKY AoSM segments (53, 0.55, and 53%, respectively; P < 0.05). There were no differences in these values between SHR and WKY PASM segments, unlike the AoSM segments. We conclude that the Na+/H+ exchanger activity in PASM in the SHR is the same as in the WKY, which is in contrast to systemic arteries where Na+/H+ exchange is greater in the SHR.
Herlihy, J. P., M. W. Vermeulen, et al. (1995). "Impaired alveolar macrophage function in smoke inhalation injury." J Cell Physiol 163(1): 1-8.
The high incidence of both bacterial pneumonia and the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) associated with smoke inhalation injury (SII) may result, at least in part, from smoke-induced injury to the alveolar macrophage (AM). Specifically, we hypothesized that AM antimicrobial function, ability to phagocytose apoptotic PMNs, and capacity to prevent apoptosis in PMNs are impaired by smoke. To test these hypotheses, AMs were harvested by bronchoalveolar lavage from sheep before and after the animal was exposed to cotton smoke. The two populations of AMs were incubated with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PSA) in vitro. Normal AMs (NAMs) phagocytosed a mean of 99 +/- 11% of the PSA placed in their wells, whereas smoke-exposed AMs (SAMs) ingested only 60 +/- 8%. NAMs killed 80 +/- 8% of PSA ingested, whereas SAMs killed only 56 +/- 16% (P < 0.05). When sheep PMNs, allowed to undergo apoptosis, were incubated with the two AM populations, 66 +/- 3% of the NAMs and 40 +/- 6% of the SAMs demonstrated phagocytosis of these apoptotic PMNs (P < 0.05). Fresh sheep PMNs were incubated in unconditioned media, NAM and SAM-conditioned media, and followed over 48 hr for the development of apoptosis and maintenance of viability. The NAM-conditioned media markedly prevented apoptosis and augmented PMN survival relative to the unconditioned and SAM-conditioned media (P < 0.05). The poor antimicrobial function known to be characteristic of apoptotic PMNs, together with the directly impaired antimicrobial function of AMs, may contribute to the infectious complications of SII. If the PMNs recruited to the lung in SII are not properly supported by the AMs following smoke injury, large numbers may undergo apoptosis. If not properly disposed of by these SAMs, the apoptotic PMNs could eventually lyse, releasing tissue toxins, resulting in escalation of lung injury and leading to ARDS.
Hales, C. A., S. Musto, et al. (1995). "BW-755C diminishes smoke-induced pulmonary edema." J Appl Physiol 78(1): 64-9.
Pulmonary edema following smoke inhalation is due to the chemical toxins in smoke and not to the heat. We have shown that acrolein, a common component of smoke, induces pulmonary edema, perhaps via release of leukotrienes. We, therefore, hypothesized that acrolein, a component of smoke from burning cotton, might have a major role in producing pulmonary edema in sheep after cotton smoke inhalation and that BW-755C, a combined cyclo- and lipoxygenase inhibitor, would prevent the edema, whereas indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, would not. In control anesthetized sheep (n = 7), 128 breaths of cotton smoke induced no change in pulmonary arterial pressure but induced increases (P < 0.05) in pulmonary lymph flow from 4.4 +/- 0.8 (SE) to 15 +/- 2.7 ml/h, lymph protein flux from 0.25 +/- 0.08 to 0.80 +/- 0.16 g/h, and blood-corrected wet-to-dry weight ratios from a normal value of 3.8 +/- 0.07 (n = 9) to 4.5 +/- 0.18. Indomethacin (n = 6) did not significantly prevent these changes, whereas BW-755C decreased lung lymph flow change from 5 +/- 1 to 7 +/- 2 ml/h (P = NS), lymph protein flux from 0.25 +/- 0.08 to 0.35 +/- 0.1 g/h (P = NS), and weight-to-dry ratio from normal to 3.9 +/- 2.1 (P = NS). These data suggest leukotrienes may have a role in producing cotton smoke-induced noncardiogenic pulmonary edema.
Thompson, B. T., C. R. Spence, et al. (1994). "Inhibition of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension by heparins of differing in vitro antiproliferative potency." Am J Respir Crit Care Med 149(6): 1512-7.
Heparin inhibits smooth-muscle cell (SMC) growth in vitro and inhibits the development of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension and vascular remodeling in vivo. We wondered whether preparations of heparin with different antiproliferative potency in vitro would differ in their ability to inhibit the development of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in vivo. Two such heparins, a weakly antiproliferative lot of Elkins-Sinn (E-S) (% inhibition of SMC growth at 10 micrograms/ml = 13 +/- 9% [mean +/- SEM, n = 24]) and a more active lot from Upjohn (UJ) (% inhibition = 71 +/- 12% [n = 12, p < 0.05 versus E-S]), were infused subcutaneously (300 U.S.P. units/day; E-S 300 versus UJ 300) via an osmotic pump into guinea pigs exposed to hypoxia (10% O2) for 10 d, after which pulmonary artery pressure (PAP; mm Hg) and cardiac index (CI; ml/min/kg) were measured in room air. Hypoxic controls (HC) received saline. PAP increased from 11 +/- 1 mm Hg in normoxic controls (NC) (n = 5) to 24 +/- 1 mm Hg in HC (n = 8, p < 0.05). The PAP was lower in the E-S 300 (21 +/- 1; n = 7, p < 0.05 versus HC and NC) and even lower in the UJ 300-treated group (18 +/- 0.5; n = 7, p < 0.05 versus HC and NC). Total pulmonary vascular resistance (TPR; mm Hg/ml/min/kg) increased significantly from 0.038 +/- 0.002 in NC to 0.076 +/- 0.003 (p < 0.05) in HC. There was no difference in TPR between the HC and the E-S 300-treated group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Janssens, S. P., S. W. Musto, et al. (1994). "Cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase inhibition by BW-755C reduces acrolein smoke-induced acute lung injury." J Appl Physiol 77(2): 888-95.
Inhalation of smoke containing acrolein, the most common toxin in urban fires after carbon monoxide, causes vascular injury with non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema containing potentially edematogenic eicosanoids such as thromboxane (Tx) B2, leukotriene (LT) B4, and the sulfidopeptide LTs (LTC4, LTD4, and LTE4). To determine which eicosanoids are important in the acute lung injury, we pretreated sheep with BW-755C (a combined cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase inhibitor), U-63557A (a specific Tx synthetase inhibitor), or indomethacin (a cyclooxygenase inhibitor) before a 10-min exposure to a synthetic smoke containing carbon particles (4 microns) with acrolein and compared the results with those from control sheep that received only carbon smoke. Acrolein smoke induced a fall in arterial PO2 and rises in peak inspiratory pressure, main pulmonary arterial pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance, lung lymph flow, and the blood-free wet-to-dry weight ratio. BW-755C delayed the rise in peak inspiratory pressure and prevented the fall in arterial PO2, the rise in lymph flow, and the rise in wet-to-dry weight ratio. Neither indomethacin nor U-63557A prevented the increase in lymph flow or wet-to-dry weight ratio, although they did blunt and delay the rise in airway pressure and did prevent the rises in pulmonary arterial pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance. Thus, cyclooxygenase products, probably Tx, are responsible for the pulmonary hypertension after acrolein smoke and to some extent for the increased airway resistance but not the pulmonary edema. Prevention of high-permeability pulmonary edema after smoke with BW-755C suggests that LTB4, may be etiologic, as previous work has eliminated LTC4, LTD4, and LTE4.
Janssens, S. P., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1994). "Functional and structural changes with hypoxia in pulmonary circulation of spontaneously hypertensive rats." J Appl Physiol 77(3): 1101-7.
Chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension involves both vasoconstriction and vascular remodeling. Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) have an increased systemic vascular resistance and a greater responsiveness to constricting stimuli. We hypothesized that, in contrast to age-matched normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY), SHR also display spontaneous pulmonary hypertension in normoxia and increased vascular response to acute and chronic hypoxia. Baseline mean pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) and total pulmonary resistance (TPR) were higher in SHR than in WKY. With acute hypoxia (10% O2 for 15 min), PAP increased to the same extent in SHR and WKY and cardiac output (CO) was unchanged in WKY but increased in SHR. Thus, the rise in PAP in the SHR might be accounted for by the rise in CO, as TPR did not rise, but not that in the WKY, as TPR increased. After 12 days in hypoxia (10% O2), mean arterial pressure was unchanged in WKY but decreased significantly in SHR without a change in CO. PAP increased by 59% in SHR and 54% in WKY when the rats were taken from the hypoxic chamber for 1 h. Acute hypoxic challenge caused a further increase in PAP only in WKY. Medial wall thickness of alveolar duct and terminal bronchial vessels was similar in WKY and SHR after chronic hypoxia. We conclude that SHR exhibit mild baseline pulmonary hypertension in normoxia and that chronic hypoxia does not produce a disproportionate increase in SHR pulmonary vascular remodeling and pulmonary hypertension.
Hales, C. A. (1994). "Squat like a toad close at the ear of Eve." J Clin Invest 94(3): 919-20.
Venegas, J. G., K. Tsuzaki, et al. (1993). "Regional coupling between chest wall and lung expansion during HFV: a positron imaging study." J Appl Physiol 74(5): 2242-52.
Apparently conflicting differences between the regional chest wall motion and gas transport have been observed during high-frequency ventilation (HFV). To elucidate the mechanism responsible for such differences, a positron imaging technique capable of assessing dynamic chest wall volumetric expansion, regional lung volume, and regional gas transport was developed. Anesthetized supine dogs were studied at ventilatory frequencies (f) ranging from 1 to 15 Hz and eucapnic tidal volumes. The regional distribution of mean lung volume was found to be independent of f, but the apex-to-base ratio of regional chest wall expansion favored the lung bases at low f and became more homogeneous at higher f. Regional gas transport per unit of lung volume, assessed from washout maneuvers, was homogeneous at 1 Hz, favored the bases progressively as f increased to 9 Hz, and returned to homogeneity at 15 Hz. Interregional asynchrony (pendelluft) and right-to-left differences were small at this large regional scale. Analysis of the data at a higher spatial resolution showed that the motion of the diaphragm relative to the excursions of the rib cage decreased as f increased. These differences from apex to base in regional chest wall expansion and gas transport were consistent with a simple model including lung, rib cage, and diaphragm regional impedances and a viscous coupling between lungs and chest wall caused by the relative sliding between pleural surfaces. To further test this model, we studied five additional animals under open chest conditions. These studies resulted in a homogeneous and f-independent regional gas transport. We conclude that the apex-to-base distribution of gas transport observed during HFV is not caused by intrinsic lung heterogeneity but rather is a result of chest wall expansion dynamics and its coupling to the lung.
Tsuzaki, K., C. A. Hales, et al. (1993). "Regional lung mechanics and gas transport in lungs with inhomogeneous compliance." J Appl Physiol 75(1): 206-16.
The effect of respiratory frequency (f) on the distributions of ventilation, regional gas transport, lung volume, and regional impedance was assessed with positron imaging in lungs with nonuniform lung mechanics after unilateral lung lavage. Supine dogs were studied during eucapnic oscillatory ventilation at f between 1 and 15 Hz and at a constant mean airway pressure of 5 cmH2O. Substantial differences in mean lung volume and tidal volume (VT) between lavaged and control lungs were found at all f values, but pendelluft never exceeded 2% of mouth flow. For f < or = 10 Hz, VT distributed in direct proportion to lung volume, whereas gas transport per unit of lung volume, measured from washout maneuvers, was reduced by 20% in the lavaged lung. At 15 Hz, however, the distributions of VT and gas transport approached equality between both lungs. Regional impedance was analyzed with a model that included a Newtonian resistance, an inertance, and Hildebrandt’s model of tissue viscoelasticity. The data obtained from this work provide useful insights with respect to the mechanisms of gas transport during high-frequency ventilation and suggest the impact of operating frequency in clinical situations where substantial interregional heterogeneity in lung compliance could be expected.
Thompson, B. T., D. M. Steigman, et al. (1993). "Chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in the guinea pig: effect of three levels of hypoxia." J Appl Physiol 74(2): 916-21.
Chronic hypoxia [inspiratory PO2 (PIO2) = 76 Torr for 10 days] produces pulmonary hypertension and vascular remodeling in the guinea pig. Increasing the duration of hypoxia from 10 to 21 days does not increase further pulmonary arterial pressure or medial thickening. To see if increasing severity of hypoxia affects the magnitude of pulmonary hypertension and remodeling, we exposed three groups of male Hartley guinea pigs to three levels of normobaric hypoxia for 10 days: PIO2 = 90 (n = 6), 78 (n = 6), and 65 Torr (n = 5). Pulmonary arterial pressure increased from 14 +/- 1 (+/- SE, n = 7) in room air to 23 +/- 3 mmHg when PIO2 = 90 Torr (P < 0.05). Pulmonary arterial pressure was slightly higher when PIO2 = 78 or 65 Torr (25 +/- 1 and 26 +/- 1 mmHg, respectively) but did not reach statistical significance vs. PIO2 = 90 Torr. Total pulmonary vascular resistance increased from 0.049 +/- 0.004 in room air to between 0.084 +/- 0.006 and 0.101 +/- 0.003 mmHg.min.kg.ml-1 (P < 0.05) in the three hypoxic groups; again there was no difference in total pulmonary vascular resistance among hypoxic groups. Medial thickness of alveolar duct and terminal bronchiole arteries increased with hypoxia, but there was no significant difference among the hypoxic groups. The percentage of intra-acinar vessels with thick walls (a measure of muscular extension) increased when PIO2 = 78 Torr and nearly doubled when PIO2 = 65 Torr in comparison to control.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Spence, C. R., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1993). "Effect of aerosol heparin on the development of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in the guinea pig." Am Rev Respir Dis 148(1): 241-4.
Chronic hypoxia produces pulmonary artery hypertension through vasoconstriction and structural remodeling of the pulmonary vascular bed. The present study was designed to test the effect of heparin administered via aerosol on the development of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension. Anesthetized, intubated, and mechanically ventilated guinea pigs received an aerosol of either 2 ml normal saline (hypoxic control, HC) or 4,500 units of heparin diluted in 2 ml normal saline via an ultrasonic nebulizer (hypoxic heparin, HH). After 24 h of recovery, the animals were placed in a hypoxic chamber (10% O2) for 10 days. Animals kept in room air served as normoxic controls (NC). Hypoxia increased mean pulmonary artery pressure from 11 +/- 1 (SEM) mm Hg in NC to 24 +/- 1 mm Hg in HC (p < 0.05). Pulmonary artery pressure was significantly lower in HH-treated animals (20 +/- 1 mm Hg, p < 0.05 versus HC) as was the total pulmonary vascular resistance (0.15 +/- 0.01 in HH versus 0.20 +/- 0.01 mm Hg/ml/min in HC, p < 0.05). There was no difference in cardiac output (146 +/- 12 in HH versus 126 +/- 7 ml/min in HC), hematocrit (57 +/- 2 in HH versus 56 +/- 2% in HC), partial thromboplastin time (30 +/- 2 in HH versus 32 +/- 3 s in HC), prothrombin time (46 +/- 1 in HH versus 48 +/- 4 s in HC) or room air arterial blood gas values after 10 days of hypoxia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Janssens, S. P., C. Kachoris, et al. (1993). "Hypothalamic Na+,K(+)-ATPase inhibitor constricts pulmonary arteries of spontaneously hypertensive rats." J Cardiovasc Pharmacol 22 Suppl 2: S42-6.
Hypothalamic inhibitory factor (HIF) is an endogenous high-affinity inhibitor of Na+,K(+)-ATPase with ouabain-like properties and has been implicated in the pathogenesis of genetic systemic hypertension. We wondered whether HIF might also be associated with the recently demonstrated pulmonary hypertension of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs). We compared HIF effects on the contractility of isolated 2- to 3-mm pulmonary artery (PA) rings from SHRs and age-matched normotensive Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. HIF caused a reversible, concentration-dependent increase in tension in PA rings of SHR and SD rats, whereas ouabain did not. PA tension development with HIF (4 nM final concentration) was significantly higher in SHRs than in SD rats: 308 +/- 56 mg (mean +/- SE) vs. 137 +/- 26, respectively, p < 0.05. Abdominal aortic contractions induced by HIF did not differ between SHRs and SD rats. In SHRs, but not SD rats, the effect on PA rings was significantly greater than on aortic rings. In all cases, contraction was abolished by phentolamine but was unaffected by calcium-channel blockade using verapamil. HIF-induced tension development required external Ca2+. We conclude that PA rings from SHRs are more sensitive to Na+,K(+)-ATPase inhibitory effects of HIF than PA rings from SD rats, which may contribute to the observed pulmonary hypertension in SHR. Local modulation of the Na+,K(+)-ATPase-adrenergic neuroeffector interaction may be the vasoconstrictive mechanism of action of HIF in these vessels.
Stein, P. D., C. Athanasoulis, et al. (1992). "Complications and validity of pulmonary angiography in acute pulmonary embolism." Circulation 85(2): 462-8.
BACKGROUND. The Prospective Investigation of Pulmonary Embolism Diagnosis (PIOPED) addressed the value of ventilation/perfusion scans in acute pulmonary embolism (PE). The present study evaluates the risks and diagnostic validity of pulmonary angiography in 1,111 patients who underwent angiography in PIOPED. METHODS AND RESULTS. Complications were death in five (0.5%), major nonfatal complications in nine (1%), and less significant or minor in 60 (5%). More fatal or major nonfatal complications occurred in patients from the medical intensive care unit than elsewhere: five of 122 (4%) versus nine of 989 (1%) (p less than 0.02). Pulmonary artery pressure, volume of contrast material, and presence of PE did not significantly affect the frequency of complications. Renal dysfunction, either major (requiring dialysis) or less severe, occurred in 13 of 1,111 (1%). Patients who developed renal dysfunction after angiography were older than those who did not have renal dysfunction: 74 +/- 13 years versus 57 +/- 17 years (p less than 0.001). Angiograms were nondiagnostic in 35 of 1,111 (3%), and studies were incomplete in 12 of 1,111 (1%), usually because of a complication. Surveillance after negative angiograms showed PE in four of 675 (0.6%). Angiograms, interpreted on the basis of consensus readings, resulted in an unchallenged diagnosis in 96%. CONCLUSIONS. The risks of pulmonary angiography were sufficiently low to justify it as a diagnostic tool in the appropriate clinical setting. Clinical judgment is probably the most important consideration in the assessment of risk.
Quinn, D. A., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1992). "A prospective investigation of pulmonary embolism in women and men." Jama 268(13): 1689-96.
OBJECTIVE. The aim of this study was to compare, in women and men suspected of pulmonary embolism, the frequency, risk factors, diagnosis, and presentation of pulmonary embolism as well as the accuracy of the ventilation/perfusion scan (V/Q scan) as a diagnostic tool. DESIGN. Data were collected during a prospective study (the Prospective Investigation of Pulmonary Embolism Diagnosis) to establish the accuracy of the V/Q scan compared with pulmonary angiograms. SETTING. Six tertiary medical centers in Massachusetts, Michigan, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina. PARTICIPANTS. Patients suspected of pulmonary embolism for whom a request was made for a V/Q scan or pulmonary angiogram (496 women and 406 men). RESULTS. Women 50 years old and under had a decreased frequency of pulmonary embolism compared with men of that age (16% vs 32%), but there was no difference in patients over 50 years old (Breslow-Day test, P less than .01). Risk factors for pulmonary embolism, the usefulness of the V/Q scan, and 1-year mortality were not different for women and men. Estrogen use in women was not associated with an increased frequency of pulmonary embolism, except in women using oral contraceptives who had undergone surgery within 3 months; four of five (80%) had emboli compared with four of 28 (14%) age-matched surgical patients not using estrogens (P less than .01). CONCLUSION. Women 50 years old and under (even young women using oral contraceptives) who were suspected of having pulmonary emboli and were enrolled in the Prospective Investigation of Pulmonary Embolism Diagnosis study had a smaller frequency of pulmonary embolism than men of that age, The risk factors for pulmonary embolism were the same for women and men, except that women using oral contraceptives had an increased risk of pulmonary embolism following surgery. Although the V/Q scan was a useful tool in the preliminary evaluation for pulmonary embolism in these women, a pulmonary angiogram was often needed for accurate diagnosis.
Lesser, B. A., K. V. Leeper, Jr., et al. (1992). "The diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease." Chest 102(1): 17-22.
The clinical features and noninvasive tests, including ventilation perfusion (V/Q) lung scans, were assessed in 108 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) suspected of having pulmonary embolism (PE). Twenty-one (19 percent) of 108 patients had PE. In the majority of patients, it was impossible to distinguish between patients with and without PE by clinical assessment alone. However, when a high clinical index of suspicion was present, PE was confirmed by angiography in three of three patients, but the V/Q scan was of intermediate probability. No roentgenographic abnormalities distinguished between PE and no PE. There was no difference between the alveolar-arterial oxygen gradients in either group, nor was there evidence of a reduction in the PaCO2 in patients with PE who had prior hypercapnia. Among the 108 patients with COPD, high, intermediate, low, and normal/near normal probability scans were present in 5 percent, 60 percent, 30 percent, and 5 percent, respectively. The frequency of PE in these V/Q scan categories was five (100 percent) of five, 14 (22 percent) of 65, two (6 percent) of 33, and zero (0 percent) of five, respectively. In conclusion, in the majority of patients, the V/Q scan diagnosis is usually intermediate and such patients require further investigational studies, including angiography. However, among the few patients who demonstrated a high probability lung scan, there was a high positive predictive value for PE effectively avoiding the need for further studies. In those patients with low probability or near normal/normal V/Q scans, the negative predictive value was not lower than the general hospital population.
Hassoun, P. M., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1992). "Partial reversal of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension by heparin." Am Rev Respir Dis 145(1): 193-6.
Chronic hypoxia produces pulmonary hypertension and an increase in medial thickness of pulmonary arteries that reach maximal values after 10 days of hypoxia. We previously showed that heparin given during the first 10 days of hypoxia reduced the development of both pulmonary hypertension and vascular remodeling in the guinea pig. To determine if heparin could reverse established hypoxic pulmonary hypertension and vascular remodeling, we administered heparin by continuous subcutaneous infusion (20 U/kg/h) for the last 7 days of a 21-day exposure to hypoxia (10% O2, balance N2) and compared these animals with normal saline-infused hypoxic control and room air-exposed animals. Hypoxia increased pulmonary artery pressure from 11 +/- 1 mm Hg (mean +/- SEM) in room air animals to 20 +/- 2 mm Hg (p less than 0.05) in saline-treated hypoxic control animals. Heparin reduced pulmonary artery pressure to 16 +/- 1 mm Hg (p less than 0.05 versus hypoxic control and room air control animals). Total pulmonary resistance (TPR) increased with hypoxia from 0.043 +/- 0.003 mm Hg x min x kg-1 x ml-1 in room air to 0.090 +/- 0.004 in hypoxia (p less than 0.05), and in the rise in TPR was also partially reversed by heparin to 0.068 +/- 0.0003 (p less than 0.05). The percentage of medial thickness of alveolar duct arteries increased from 5.8 +/- 0.6% in room air to 9.5 +/- 0.1% (p less than 0.05) after 3 wk of hypoxia, and heparin therapy partially reversed the increase in medial thickness to 7.2 +/- 0.7% (p less than 0.05 versus both hypoxia control and room air).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hales, C. A., S. W. Musto, et al. (1992). "Smoke aldehyde component influences pulmonary edema." J Appl Physiol 72(2): 555-61.
The pulmonary edema of smoke inhalation is caused by the toxins of smoke and not the heat. We investigated the potential of smoke consisting of carbon in combination with either acrolein or formaldehyde (both common components of smoke) to cause pulmonary edema in anesthetized sheep. Seven animals received acrolein smoke, seven animals received a low-dose formaldehyde smoke, and five animals received a high-dose formaldehyde smoke. Pulmonary arterial pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, and cardiac output were not affected by smoke in any group. Peak airway pressure increased after acrolein (14 +/- 1 to 21 +/- 2 mmHg; P less than 0.05) and after low- and high-dose formaldehyde (14 +/- 1 to 21 +/- 1 and 20 +/- 1 mmHg, respectively; both P less than 0.05). The partial pressure of O2 in arterial blood fell sharply after acrolein [219 +/- 29 to 86 +/- 9 (SE) Torr; P less than 0.05] but not after formaldehyde. Only acrolein resulted in a rise in lung lymph flow (6.5 +/- 2.2 to 17.9 +/- 2.6 ml/h; P less than 0.05). Lung lymph-to-plasma protein ratio was unchanged for all three groups, but clearance of lymph protein was increased after acrolein. After acrolein, the blood-free extravascular lung water-to-lung dry weight ratio was elevated (P less than 0.05) compared with both low- and high-dose formaldehyde groups (4.8 +/- 0.4 to 3.3 +/- 0.2 and 3.6 +/- 0.2, respectively). Lymph clearance (ng/h) of thromboxane B2, leukotriene B4, and the sulfidopeptide leukotrienes was elevated after acrolein but not formaldehyde.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Venegas, J. G., Y. Yamada, et al. (1991). "Contributions of diffusion jet flow and cardiac activity to regional ventilation in CFV." J Appl Physiol 71(4): 1540-53.
The magnitude and regional distribution of local gas transport during constant-flow ventilation (CFV) were quantified by imaging the washout of nitrogen 13 (13NN) from anesthetized and paralyzed mongrel dogs with positron emission tomography. Equal jet flows, through two 2-mm-ID bronchial catheters 1 cm distal to the carina, were adjusted to provide eucapnic CFV (total flow = 57.6 ml.s-1.kg-1). Basal, midheart, and apical transverse sections were studied in supine and prone anesthetized dogs. The ventilation per unit volume (sV) of selected areas was computed from local 13NN concentration vs. time curves during washout. To separate the regional contributions of CFV and cardiogenic oscillation to enhanced molecular diffusion, additional supine dogs were also studied during unilateral CFV. In this protocol the CFV jet flow was delivered to a single lung while the contralateral lung was left apneic. For each lung, washout data were obtained under CFV and apnea both living and postmortem animals. The local contributions of diffusion, CFV jet effects, and cardiac activity to gas transport were evaluated and tested for additive and multiplicative synergistic interactions. The regional distribution of gas transport during CFV was found to be highly nonuniform and characterized by higher ventilation to regions located close to the main bronchi and those located in the direction in which the CFV jet pointed. No major differences were observed between supine and prone positions. This regional pattern of ventilation distribution was found to be the result of complementary and nearly multiplicative interaction between the regional effects of the CFV jet, concentrated in the central airways, and the preferential cardiogenic gas transport enhancement in ventral regions close to the heart. The data were also analyzed with a model that divides the regional diffusive gas transport resistance into a central component, affected by the CFV jet, and a peripheral component, affected only by cardiac activity. This analysis showed substantial regional heterogeneities in the effects of the different gas transport mechanisms, which are consistent with the geometry of the bronchial tree and the location of the heart in the dog. The results indicate that regional nonuniformities must be considered when modeling gas transport in CFV.
Stein, P. D., A. Alavi, et al. (1991). "Usefulness of noninvasive diagnostic tools for diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism in patients with a normal chest radiograph." Am J Cardiol 67(13): 1117-20.
The value of bedside examination and noninvasive tests in the diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism (PE) among patients with a normal chest radiograph was investigated. Normal chest radiographs were present in 20 of 260 patients (8%) with acute PE and in 113 of 642 (18%) with suspected acute PE, in whom the diagnosis was excluded. A partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood less than or equal to 70 mm Hg in a dyspneic patient with a normal chest radiograph was more often seen among patients with PE (9 of 17, 53%) than among patients in whom PE was excluded (18 of 93, 19%; p less than 0.01). However, no combinations of blood gases, signs and symptoms were strictly diagnostic. High probability ventilation/perfusion scans among patients with a normal chest radiograph were indicative of PE in only 6 of 9 patients (67%). Among patients with low-probability ventilation/perfusion scans, 8 of 47 (17%) had PE. This study showed that the combination of dyspnea and hypoxia in a patient with a normal chest radiograph is a useful clue to the diagnosis of PE. Although intuition suggested that ventilation/perfusion scans would yield better results in patients with a normal chest radiograph, the ability to diagnose PE by ventilation/perfusion scans in this subset of patients was not enhanced, except by a reduction of the percentage of patients with intermediate probability scans.
Stein, P. D., M. L. Terrin, et al. (1991). "Clinical, laboratory, roentgenographic, and electrocardiographic findings in patients with acute pulmonary embolism and no pre-existing cardiac or pulmonary disease." Chest 100(3): 598-603.
The history, physical examination, chest radiograph, electrocardiogram and blood gases were evaluated in patients with suspected acute pulmonary embolism (PE) and no history or evidence of pre-existing cardiac or pulmonary disease. The investigation focused upon patients with no previous cardiac or pulmonary disease in order to evaluate the clinical characteristics that were due only to PE. Acute PE was present in 117 patients and PE was excluded in 248 patients. Among the patients with PE, dyspnea or tachypnea (greater than or equal to 20/min) was present in 105 of 117 (90 percent). Dyspnea, hemoptysis, or pleuritic pain was present in 107 of 117 (91 percent). The partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood on room air was less than 80 mm Hg in 65 of 88 (74 percent). The alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient was greater than 20 mm Hg in 76 of 88 (86 percent). The chest radiograph was abnormal in 98 of 117 (84 percent). Atelectasis and/or pulmonary parenchymal abnormalities were most common, 79 of 117 (68 percent). Nonspecific ST segment or T wave change was the most common electrocardiographic abnormality, in 44 of 89 (49 percent). Dyspnea, tachypnea, or signs of deep venous thrombosis was present in 107 of 117 (91 percent). Dyspnea or tachypnea or pleuritic pain was present in 113 of 117 (97 percent). Dyspnea or tachypnea or pleuritic pain was present in 113 of 117 (97 percent). Dyspnea or tachypnea or pleuritic pain or atelectasis or a parenchymal abnormality on the chest radiograph was present in 115 of 117 (98 percent). In conclusion, among the patients with pulmonary embolism that were identified, only a small percentage did not have these important manifestations or combinations of manifestations. Clinical evaluation, though nonspecific, is of considerable value in the selection of patients in whom there is a need for further diagnostic studies.
Quinn, D. A., T. W. Honeyman, et al. (1991). "Contribution of Na+/H+ exchange to pH regulation in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells." Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 5(6): 586-91.
In blood vessels in the systemic circulation, the plasmalemmal Na+/H+ exchanger has been implicated in a variety of cellular functions, including the regulation of intracellular pH (pHi) and cell volume, and the response to smooth muscle mitogens. The role of this transport system in pulmonary vascular smooth muscle has not been explored. The present study examined the characteristics of Na+/H+ exchange in cultured guinea pig pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells. These cells were subjected to an acid load, and the recovery from acid loading was monitored using the fluorescent pH-sensitive dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF). In the absence of HCO3-, pHi recovery from acid loading was dependent on external Na+ and was inhibited by the Na+/H+ exchange inhibitor dimethylamiloride (DMA) (recovery rate was reduced from 54.4 +/- 5.5 to 12.8 +/- 2.0 mmol H+/liter.min). This exchanger was also active in the presence of HCO3-; DMA reduced resting pHi and slowed the rate of recovery from acid loading in HCO3- buffers. However, in the presence of HCO3-, other transport systems, presumably HCO3-/Cl- exchange, also contribute to the regulation of pHi. In HCO3- buffers, the rate of recovery from acid load averaged 40.8 +/- 1.8 mmol H+/liter.min. Addition of 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS), an inhibitor of HCO3-/Cl- exchange, slowed this recovery to 25.5 +/- 1.6 mmol H+/liter.min. A combination of DIDS and DMA further slowed the recovery to 19.7 +/- 1.5 mmol H+/liter.min. These findings indicate that the Na+/H+ exchanger plays a significant role in the regulation of pHi in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells, even in HCO(3-)-containing buffers.
Janssens, S. P., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1991). "Polycythemia and vascular remodeling in chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in guinea pigs." J Appl Physiol 71(6): 2218-23.
Chronic hypoxia increases pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) as a result of vasoconstriction, polycythemia, and vascular remodeling with medial thickening. To determine whether preventing the polycythemia with repeated bleeding would diminish the pulmonary hypertension and remodeling, we compared hemodynamic and histological profiles in hypoxic bled (HB, n = 6) and hypoxic polycythemic guinea pigs (H, n = 6). After 10 days in hypoxia (10% O2), PAP was increased from 10 +/- 1 (SE) mmHg in room air controls (RA, n = 5) to 20 +/- 1 mmHg in H (P less than 0.05) but was lower in HB (15 +/- 1 mmHg, P less than 0.05 vs. H). Cardiac output and pulmonary artery vasoreactivity did not differ among groups. Total pulmonary vascular resistance increased from 0.072 +/- 0.011 mmHg.ml-1.min in RA to 0.131 mmHg.ml-1.min in H but was significantly lower in HB (0.109 +/- 0.006 mmHg.ml-1.min). Hematocrit increased with hypoxia (57 +/- 3% in H vs. 42 +/- 1% in RA, P less than 0.05), and bleeding prevented the increase (46 +/- 4% in HB, P less than 0.05 vs. H only). The proportion of thick-walled peripheral pulmonary vessels (53.2 +/- 2.9% in HB and 50.6 +/- 4.8% in H vs. 31.6 +/- 2.6% in RA, P less than 0.05) and the percent medial thickness of pulmonary arteries adjacent to alveolar ducts (7.2 +/- 0.6% in HB and 7.0 +/- 0.4% in H vs. 5.2 +/- 0.4% in RA, P less than 0.05) increased to a similar degree in both hypoxic groups. A similar tendency was present in larger bronchiolar vessels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Venegas, J. G., Y. Yamada, et al. (1990). "Local gas transport in eucapnic ventilation: effects of gravity and breathing frequency." J Appl Physiol 68(6): 2287-95.
The effects of body position and respiratory frequency (f) on regional gas transport during eucapnic conventional ventilation (CV) and high-frequency ventilation (HFV) were assessed from the washout of nitrogen 13 (13NN) using positron-emission tomography. In one protocol, six dogs were ventilated with CV or HFV at f = 6 Hz and tidal volume (VT) selected supine for eucapnia. A coronal cross section of the lung base was studied in the supine, prone, and right and left lateral decubitus positions. In a second protocol, six dogs were studied prone: apical and basal cross sections were studied in CV and in HFV with f = 3 and 9 Hz at eucapnic VT. Regional alveolar ventilation per unit of lung volume (spVr) was calculated for selected regions and analyzed for gravity-dependent cephalocaudal and right-to-left gradients. In both CV and HFV, nonuniformity in spVr was highest supine and lowest prone. In CV there were vertical gradients of spVr in all body positions: nondependent less ventilated than dependent regions, particularly in the supine position. In HFV there was a moderate vertical gradient in spVr in addition to a preferentially ventilated central region in all body positions. Overall lung spV was unaffected by body position in CV but in HFV was highest supine and lowest prone. Nonuniformity in eucapnic prone HFV was unaffected by f and always higher than in CV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Quinn, D. A., D. Robinson, et al. (1990). "Intravenous injection of propylene glycol causes pulmonary hypertension in sheep." J Appl Physiol 68(4): 1415-20.
Propylene glycol (30%) is the carrier base for pentobarbital sodium in preparations often used in research laboratories. It has caused pulmonary hypertension in calves, and we found it caused pulmonary hypertension in sheep as well. To investigate the mechanism of pulmonary hypertension with propylene glycol, we injected an average loading dose of 30% propylene glycol (0.5 ml/kg) into adult sheep, which was followed by a rise in thromboxane levels (P less than 0.05) in systemic arterial plasma and lung lymph and by a dramatic increase in pulmonary arterial pressure (17 +/- 1 to 35 +/- 4 mmHg, P less than 0.05) and a fall in cardiac output (2.7 +/- 0.5 to 1 +/- 0.2 l/min). Indomethacin pretreatment blocked the rise in thromboxane in lung lymph and arterial plasma and substantially, although not entirely, blocked the rise in pulmonary arterial pressure. Pulmonary intravascular macrophages (PIMS), which are present in sheep and calves, can release thromboxane in response to a stimulus. To test whether PIMS might be the source of the thromboxane and pulmonary hypertension, we injected propylene glycol into guinea pigs and dogs, which are reported to have no PIMS, as well as into newborn lambs, which are not believed to develop many PIMS until the 2nd wk of life. In dogs and guinea pigs there was no response to propylene glycol. In lambs there was a rise in pulmonary vascular resistance but significantly less than in adult sheep; indomethacin blocked this response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Quinn, D. A., D. Robinson, et al. (1990). "Role of sulfidopeptide leukotrienes in synthetic smoke inhalation injury in sheep." J Appl Physiol 68(5): 1962-9.
Acute lung injury with smoke inhalation results in significant morbidity and mortality. Previously we have shown that synthetic smoke composed of carbon and acrolein, a common component of smoke, causes delayed-onset noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. To study the possible role of the vasoactive and edemagenic sulfidopeptide leukotrienes (SPLT) in smoke inhalation injury, we measured pulmonary hemodynamics, lung lymph flow, and SPLT and leukotriene (LT) B4 in lung lymph before and after 10 min of synthetic acrolein smoke exposure. After smoke exposure there was a significant rise in pulmonary vascular resistance caused by a rise in pulmonary arterial pressure, a fall in cardiac output, and no change in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure. This was accompanied by an increase in total systemic vascular resistance (P less than 0.05), lung lymph flow (P less than 0.05), and extravascular lung water-to-lung dry weight ratio (P less than 0.05). Both SPLT and LTB4 clearance rose significantly (P less than 0.05), but there was a 10-fold increase in SPLT over LTB4 clearance. In sheep pretreated with FPL55712, a SPLT antagonist, the early rise in pulmonary vascular resistance was attenuated, and the rise in systemic vascular resistance was blocked. This was associated with an attenuated and delayed fall in cardiac output. FPL55712 had no effect on lung lymph flow or extravascular lung water-to-dry weight ratio. SPLT, and especially LTD4, may have a role in increased pulmonary and systemic vascular resistance after smoke inhalation injury but does not appear to affect vascular permeability.
Yamada, Y., C. Burnham, et al. (1989). "Regional mapping of gas transport during high-frequency and conventional ventilation." J Appl Physiol 66(3): 1209-18.
The effects of changing tidal volume (VT) and frequency (f) on the distribution of ventilation during high-frequency ventilation (HFV) were assessed from the washout of nitrogen-13 by positron emission tomography. Six dogs, anesthetized and paralyzed, were studied in the supine position during conventional ventilation (CV) and during HFV at f of 3, 6, and 9 Hz. In CV and HFV at 6 Hz, VT was selected to achieve eucapnic arterial partial pressure of CO2 (37 +/- 3 Torr). At 3 and 9 Hz, VT was proportionally changed so that the product of VT and f remained constant and equal to that at 6 Hz. Mean residence time (MRT) of nitrogen-13 during washout was calculated for apical, midheart, and basal transverse sections of the lung and further analyzed for gravity-dependent, cephalocaudal and radial gradients. An index of local alveolar ventilation per unit of lung volume, or specific ventilation (spV), was calculated as the reciprocal of MRT. During CV vertical gradients of regional spV were seen in all sections with ventral (nondependent) regions less ventilated than dorsal (dependent) regions. Regional nonuniformity in gas transport was greatest for HFV at 3 and 6 Hz and lowest at 9 Hz and during CV. During HFV, a central region at the base of the lungs was preferentially ventilated, resulting in a regional time-averaged tracer concentration equivalent to that of the main bronchi. Because the main bronchi were certainly receiving fresh gas, the presence of this preferentially ventilated area, whose ventilation increased with VT, strongly supports the hypothesis that direct convection of fresh gas is an important mechanism of gas transport during eucapnic HFV. Aside from the local effect of increasing overall lung ventilation, this central area probably served as an intermediate shuttle station for the transport of gas between mouth and deeper alveoli when VT was less than the anatomic dead space.
Thompson, B. T., P. M. Hassoun, et al. (1989). "Acute and chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in guinea pigs." J Appl Physiol 66(2): 920-8.
To determine whether the strength of acute hypoxic vasoconstriction predicts the magnitude of chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension, we performed serial studies on guinea pigs. Unanesthetized, chronically catheterized guinea pigs increased mean pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) from 11 +/- 0.5 to 13 +/- 0.7 Torr in acute hypoxia (10% O2 for 65 min). The response was maximal at 5 min, remained stable for 1 h, and was reversible on return to room air. Cardiac index did not change with acute hypoxia or recovery. Guinea pigs exposed to chronic hypoxia increased PAP, measured in room air 1 h after removal from the hypoxic chamber, to 18 +/- 1 Torr by 5 days with little further increase in PAP to 20 +/- 1 Torr after 21 days. Cardiac index fell from 273 +/- 12 to 206 +/- 7 ml.kg-1.min-1 (P less than 0.05) after 21 days of hypoxia. Medial thickness of pulmonary arteries adjacent to terminal bronchioles and alveolar ducts increased significantly by 10 days. The magnitude of the pulmonary vasoconstriction to acute hypoxia persisted and was unabated during the development and apparent stabilization of chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension, suggesting that if vasoconstriction is the stimulus for remodeling, then the importance of the stimulus lessens with duration of hypoxia. In individual animals followed serially, we found no correlation between the magnitude of the acute vasoconstrictor response before chronic hypoxia and the severity of chronic pulmonary hypertension that subsequently developed either because the initial response was small and variable or because vasoconstriction may not be the sole stimulus for vascular remodeling in the guinea pig.
Li, J. J., R. L. Sanders, et al. (1989). "Impact of C-reactive protein (CRP) on surfactant function." J Trauma 29(12): 1690-7.
Plasma levels of the acute-phase reactant, C-reactive protein (CRP), increase up to one thousand-fold as a result of trauma or inflammation. CRP binds to phosphorylcholine (PC) in a calcium-ion dependent manner. The structural homology between PC and the major phospholipid component of surfactant, dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), led to the present study in which we examined if CRP levels might be increased in patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), and subsequently interfere with surfactant function. Our results showed that CRP levels in the bronchoalveolar fluid (BALF) was increased in patients with ARDS (97.8 +/- 84.2 micrograms/mg total protein vs. 4.04 +/- 2.2 micrograms/mg total protein in normals). Our results show that CRP binds to liposomes containing DPPC and phosphatidylglycerol (PG). As a result of this interaction, CRP inhibits the surface activity of a PG-DPPC mixture when tested with a Wilhelmy surfactometer or with the Enhorning pulsating bubble apparatus. Furthermore, the surface activity of a clinically used surfactant replacement, Surfactant TA (2 mg/ml), was also severely impaired by CRP in a dose-dependent manner (doses used ranging from 24.5 to 1,175 micrograms/ml). In contrast, human serum albumin (HSA) at 500 and 900 micrograms/ml had no inhibitory effect on Surfactant TA surface activity. These results suggest that CRP, although not an initiating insult in ARDS, may contribute to the subsequent abnormalities of surfactant function and thus the pathogenesis of the pulmonary dysfunction seen in ARDS.
Hassoun, P. M., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1989). "Effect of heparin and warfarin on chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension and vascular remodeling in the guinea pig." Am Rev Respir Dis 139(3): 763-8.
Chronic hypoxia produces pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary vascular remodeling. Heparin partially prevents the rise in right ventricular pressure and vascular remodeling in chronically hypoxic mice. To determine if this is due to the anticoagulant property of heparin or another property, we compared the effect of oral warfarin given at an anticoagulating dose (0.5 mg/kg/day) to heparin given by continuous infusion at a dose that does not prolong the partial thromboplastin time (PTT) (20 units/kg/h) on hypoxic pulmonary hypertension and vascular remodeling in the guinea pig. Normoxic control animals either untreated or treated with heparin or Coumadin were all alike in blood gases, pulmonary vascular resistance, right heart weights, and pulmonary histology. Hypoxia (10% 0(2) for 10 days) induced similar and significant increases in mean pulmonary artery (PA) pressure in both the hypoxic control and warfarin groups (19 +/- 1 mm Hg (mean +/- SEM) in both groups versus 11 +/- 0.1 mm Hg in the normoxic control group; p less than 0.05). Total pulmonary vascular resistance (TPR) was also increased from 0.041 +/- 0.002 in the normoxic control group to 0.087 +/- 0.007 and 0.071 +/- 0.003 mm Hg/ml/min/kg in the hypoxic control and warfarin groups, respectively (p less than 0.05). Whereas anticoagulation with warfarin did not protect the guinea pig from developing pulmonary hypertension, heparin markedly reduced PA and TPR (15 +/- 1 mm Hg and 0.052 +/- 0.002 mm Hg/ml/min/kg, respectively; p less than 0.05 versus hypoxic control or warfarin).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hales, C. A., P. Barkin, et al. (1989). "Bronchial artery ligation modifies pulmonary edema after exposure to smoke with acrolein." J Appl Physiol 67(3): 1001-6.
Pulmonary edema can follow smoke inhalation and is believed to be due to the multiple chemical toxins in smoke, not the heat. We have developed a synthetic smoke composed of aerosolized charcoal particles to which one toxin at a time can be added to determine whether it produces pulmonary edema. Acrolein, a common component of smoke, when added to the synthetic smoke, produced a delayed-onset pulmonary edema in dogs in which the extravascular lung water (EVLW) as detected by a double-indicator technique began to rise after 42 +/- 2 (SE) min from 148 +/- 16 to 376 +/- 60 ml at 165 min after smoke exposure. The resulting pulmonary edema was widespread macroscopically but appeared focal microscopically with fibrin deposits in alveoli adjacent to small bronchi and bronchioles. Bronchial vessels were markedly dilated and congested. Monastral blue B when injected intravenously leaked into the walls of the bronchial vessels down to the region of the small bronchioles (less than or equal to 0.5 mm ID) of acrolein-smoke-exposed dogs but not into the pulmonary vessels. Furthermore, ligation of the bronchial arteries delayed the onset of pulmonary edema (87 +/- 3 min, P less than 0.05) and lessened the magnitude (232 +/- 30 ml, P less than 0.05) at 166 +/- 3 min after acrolein-smoke exposure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Venegas, J. G., Y. Yamada, et al. (1988). "Effects of respiratory variables on regional gas transport during high-frequency ventilation." J Appl Physiol 64(5): 2108-18.
The regional effects of tidal volume (VT), respiratory frequency, and expiratory-to-inspiratory time ratio (TE/TI) during high-frequency ventilation (HFV) were studied in anesthetized and paralyzed dogs. Regional ventilation per unit of lung volume (spVr) was assessed with a positron camera during the washout of the tracer isotope 13NN from the lungs of 12 supine dogs. From the washout data, functional images of the mean residence time (MRT) of 13NN were produced and spVr was estimated as the inverse of the regional MRT. We found that at a constant VT X f product (where f represents frequency), increasing VT resulted in higher overall lung spV through the local enhancement of the basal spVr and with little effect in the apical spVr. In contrast, increasing VT X f at constant VT increased overall ventilation without significantly affecting the distribution of spVr values. TE/TI had no substantial effect in regional spVr distribution. These findings suggest that the dependency of gas transport during HFV of the form VT2 X f is the result of a progressive regional transition in gas transport mechanism. It appears, therefore, that as VT increases, the gas transport mechanism changes from a relative inefficient dispersive mechanism, dependent on VT X f, to the more efficient mechanism of direct fresh gas convection to alveoli with high regional tidal volume-to-dead-space ratio. A mathematical model of gas transport in a nonhomogeneous lung that exhibits such behavior is presented.
Morris, T. A., B. T. Thompson, et al. (1988). "Diffusing capacity is not measurably affected by routine lung perfusion scanning." J Nucl Med 29(7): 1268-71.
Lung scanning with radiolabeled macroaggregated albumin (MAA) has caused cardiovascular collapse and death in patients with extensive pulmonary vascular disease. These adverse reactions have been suggested to be secondary to MAA embolic occlusion of a significant portion of the remaining pulmonary circulation. The single breath diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (SBDLCO) is heavily dependent on the status of the pulmonary microcirculation and is reduced in clinical pulmonary embolism. The effect of MAA particles on the lung microcirculation was measured by SBDLCO in 11 patients undergoing clinically indicated lung perfusion scanning. SBDLCO was measured before and immediately after injection of 256,000 to 448,000 20-40 micron particles of [99mTc]MAA. Mean SBDLCO prior to injection was 18.9 +/- 1.7 (s.e.m.) and immediately after injection was unchanged at 19.0 +/- 1.6 ml/min/mmHg. The lowest pre-injection SBDLCO values were 11.5 and 6.2 ml/min/mmHg (54% and 28% of predicted, respectively); in neither of these patients was there a detectable change in SBDLCO measured after injection of MAA. Thus occlusion of as many as 448,000 20-40 micron pulmonary vessels by MAA is without detectable impact on the transfer of carbon monoxide even in patients with sufficient pulmonary disease to lower the SBDLCO to 28% of predicted.
Hales, C. A., P. W. Barkin, et al. (1988). "Synthetic smoke with acrolein but not HCl produces pulmonary edema." J Appl Physiol 64(3): 1121-33.
The chemical toxins in smoke and not the heat are responsible for the pulmonary edema of smoke inhalation. We developed a synthetic smoke composed of carbon particles (mean diameter of 4.3 microns) to which toxins known to be in smoke, such as HCl or acrolein, could be added one at a time. We delivered synthetic smoke to dogs for 10 min and monitored extravascular lung water (EVLW) accumulation thereafter with a double-indicator thermodilution technique. Final EVLW correlated highly with gravimetric values (r = 0.93, P less than 0.01). HCl in concentrations of 0.1-6 N when added to heated carbon (120 degrees C) and cooled to 39 degrees C produced airway damage but no pulmonary edema. Acrolein, in contrast, produced airway damage but also pulmonary edema, whereas capillary wedge pressures remained stable. Low-dose acrolein smoke (less than 200 ppm) produced edema in two of five animals with a 2- to 4-h delay. Intermediate-dose acrolein smoke (200-300 ppm) always produced edema at an average of 147 +/- 57 min after smoke, whereas high-dose acrolein (greater than 300 ppm) produced edema at 65 +/- 16 min after smoke. Thus acrolein but not HCl, when presented as a synthetic smoke, produced a delayed-onset, noncardiogenic, and peribronchiolar edema in a roughly dose-dependent fashion.
Tilles, D. S. and C. A. Hales (1987). "Comparison of 12-hour and 24-hour sustained-release theophylline in outpatient management of asthma." Chest 91(3): 370-5.
A once-daily sustained-release preparation of theophylline (Theo-24) was compared to a twice-daily (bid) preparation (Theo-Dur). Fourteen subjects with asthma requiring daily therapy with theophylline were evaluated in a 30-day prospective study. Pulmonary function and serum levels of theophylline were measured. With the twice-daily preparation the mean variation over 12 hours between the maximum concentration (Cmax) and minimum concentration (Cmin) for theophylline was 3.0 micrograms/ml +/- 0.3 microgram/ml, and there was no significant change in tests of pulmonary function. With the once-daily preparation the mean variation over twenty four hours between Cmax and Cmin was 7.4 micrograms/ml +/- 1.1 micrograms/ml, with a small but significant associated change in the forced expiratory volume in one second (84.1 vs 79.6 percent of predicted). Several of the subjects had large differences between Cmax and Cmin with the once-daily preparation. For some, Cmin was quite low while at the same time Cmax was high enough so that further increases in the dose of the once-daily preparation would not have been possible. Thus, consideration of the variation from Cmax to Cmin is necessary in adjusting a patient’s dose of the once-daily preparation and may present problems in changeover from the twice-daily preparation if the mean blood level of theophylline is already high.
Lee, C. W., W. Jung, et al. (1987). "LTB4 mediated hypoxemia in guinea pigs: relationship to pulmonary and cardiovascular pathophysiology." Prostaglandins 33(1): 3-16.
LTB4 is released in the presence of lung injury and may therefore play a role in the pathophysiology of the lung damage. We therefore, administered LTB4 as an I.V. bolus or as an aerosol to guinea pigs and assessed the physiologic response and the lung histology. After 2 ug of I.V. LTB4 airway pressure (AP) rose transiently by 5 +/- 1 mmHg and at five min was back to baseline while PaO2 fell from 96 +/- 5 mmHg to 78 +/- 3 mmHg and remained low at least 45 min. Static compliance (Cstat) was unchanged. Right ventricular systolic pressure (RVSP) and mean aortic pressure (MAP) rose from 9 +/- 1 to 16 +/- 1 mmHg and 43 +/- 4 to 62 +/- 5 mmHg respectively while cardiac index (C.I.) fell from 266 to 208 ml/kg/min but all values were baseline again by 10 min. Aerosolized LTB4 raised AP by 4.6 +/- 0.2 mmHg while PaO2 fell from 90 +/- 7 to 52 +/- 5 mmHg. AP recovered by 20 min but PaO2 remained low at least for 1 hour. MAP, RVSP and CI and Cstat were unaffected. Both I.V. and inhaled LTB4 increased neutrophil infiltrate in the lung although the water aerosol control did too, preventing us from showing a significant effect with LTB4 aerosol. Indomethacin blocked the airway effects and the hypoxemia after I.V. or aerosolized LTB4 but not the neutrophil infiltrate or the rise in RVSP. It actually enhanced (p less than .05) the rise in MAP after I.V. LTB4. Thus cyclooxygenase released products likely mediated the rise in airway pressure and the prolonged fall in PaO2 after LTB4 in guinea pigs but not the pulmonary and systemic vasoconstriction.
Yamada, Y., J. G. Venegas, et al. (1986). "Effects of mean airway pressure on gas transport during high-frequency ventilation in dogs." J Appl Physiol 61(5): 1896-902.
In 10 anesthetized, paralyzed, supine dogs, arterial blood gases and CO2 production (VCO2) were measured after 10-min runs of high-frequency ventilation (HFV) at three levels of mean airway pressure (Paw) (0, 5, and 10 cmH2O). HFV was delivered at frequencies (f) of 3, 6, and 9 Hz with a ventilator that generated known tidal volumes (VT) independent of respiratory system impedance. At each f, VT was adjusted at Paw of 0 cmH2O to obtain a eucapnia. As Paw was increased to 5 and 10 cmH2O, arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) increased and arterial PO2 (PaO2) decreased monotonically and significantly. The effect of Paw on PaCO2 and PaO2 was the same at 3, 6, and 9 Hz. Alveolar ventilation (VA), calculated from VCO2 and PaCO2, significantly decreased by 22.7 +/- 2.6 and 40.1 +/- 2.6% after Paw was increased to 5 and 10 cmH2O, respectively. By taking into account the changes in anatomic dead space (VD) with lung volume, VA at different levels of Paw fits the gas transport relationship for HFV derived previously: VA = 0.13 (VT/VD)1.2 VTf (J. Appl. Physiol. 60: 1025-1030, 1986). We conclude that increasing Paw and lung volume significantly decreases gas transport during HFV and that this effect is due to the concomitant increase of the volume of conducting airways.
Yamada, Y., C. A. Hales, et al. (1986). "Inspiratory-to-expiratory time ratio and alveolar ventilation during high-frequency ventilation in dogs." J Appl Physiol 61(5): 1903-7.
It has been suggested that the increase in inspiratory flow rate caused by a decrease in the inspiratory-to-expiratory time ratio (I:E) at a constant tidal volume (VT) could increase the efficiency of ventilation in high-frequency ventilation (HFV). To test this hypothesis, we studied the effect of changing I:E from 1:1 to 1:4 on steady-state alveolar ventilation (VA) at a given VT and frequency (f) and at a constant mean lung volume (VL). In nine anesthetized, paralyzed, supine dogs, HFV was performed at 3, 6, and 9 Hz with a ventilator that delivered constant inspiratory and expiratory flow rates. Mean airway pressure was adjusted so that VL was maintained at a level equivalent to that of resting FRC. At each f and one of the I:E chosen at random, VT was adjusted to obtain a eucapnic steady state [arterial pressure of CO2 (PaCO2) = 37 +/- 3 Torr]. After 10 min of each HFV, PaCO2, arterial pressure of O2 (PaO2), and CO2 production (VCO2) were measured, and I:E was changed before repeating the run with the same f and VT. VA was calculated from the ratio of VCO2 and PaCO2. We found that the change of I:E from 1:1 to 1:4 had no significant effects on PaCO2, PaO2, and VA at any of the frequencies studied. We conclude, therefore, that the mechanism or mechanisms responsible for gas transport during HFV must be insensitive to the changes in inspiratory and expiratory flow rates over the VT-f range covered in our experiments.
Venegas, J. G., C. A. Hales, et al. (1986). "A general dimensionless equation of gas transport by high-frequency ventilation." J Appl Physiol 60(3): 1025-30.
To identify a general relationship between eucapnic oscillatory flow (Vosc) and frequency (f) in high-frequency ventilation (HFV), we searched the literature for eucapnic HFV data in different mammalian species. We found suitable results for rat, rabbit, monkey, dog, human, and horse, which we expressed in terms of two dimensionless variables, Q = Vosc/Va and F = f/(VA/VD), with VA the alveolar ventilation and VD the volume of the conducting airways. The experimental HFV data define the linear regression equation in Q = 0.54 In F + 0.92 (R = 0.94). Krogh’s equation for conventional ventilation (CV), Vosc = VA + fVD, in dimensionless terms becomes Q = 1 + F, which is valid for low F. The intersection of the CV and HFV equations at F = 5.0 defines a transition frequency, ft = 5.0 (VA/VD). At that point the alveolar ventilation per breath, VA/f, represents 20% of VD, and tidal volume (VT) equals 1.20 VD. For eucapnia ft ranges from 5.9 Hz in the rat to 0.9 Hz in the dog. The dimensional form of our HFV equation, VA = 0.13 (VT/VD)1.2 (VTf) is very similar to other empirical equations reported for dogs in noneucapnic settings. Therefore the dimensionless equation should also be valid within a species at noneucapnic settings.
Tilles, D. S., P. D. Goldenheim, et al. (1986). "Pulmonary function in normal subjects and patients with sarcoidosis after bronchoalveolar lavage." Chest 89(2): 244-8.
To determine if fiberoptic bronchoscopy (FOB) with bronchoalveolar lavage impairs pulmonary function in normal subjects or those with sarcoidosis, we measured flow-volume loops, thoracic gas volume, and single breath carbon monoxide diffusing capacity before, one half hour and 24 hours after lavage. We studied 12 normal subjects; six underwent a large volume lavage (approximately 500 ml saline instilled), and six underwent a small volume lavage (approximately 175 ml). Five subjects with sarcoidosis also had a small volume lavage. Six control subjects underwent FOB without lavage. The FOB alone produced no significant changes in pulmonary function one half hour after the procedure. Small volume lavage in normal subjects produced no change except for a 16.3 +/- 5.1 percent (mean- +/- SEM) decline in peak expiratory flow rate (p less than .05) one half hour postlavage which returned to normal by 24 hours. This contrasts with sarcoidosis subjects in whom forced expiratory volume in one second, peak expiratory flow rate, and vital capacity declined by 20 +/- 4.8 percent, 26.7 +/- 7.3 percent, and 15.2 +/- 4.1 percent, respectively, (all p less than 0.05) one half hour postlavage. No change occurred in total lung capacity or diffusing capacity. Only with large volume lavage did decrements in lung function occur in normal patients that were comparable to those seen in the sarcoidosis subjects. Our findings suggest that bronchoalveolar lavage in normal patients can be associated with a significant and volume-related decline in pulmonary function and that in subjects with sarcoidosis, the deterioration is more pronounced.
Tilles, D. S., P. D. Goldenheim, et al. (1986). "Marijuana smoking as cause of reduction in single-breath carbon monoxide diffusing capacity." Am J Med 80(4): 601-6.
To investigate the effects of chronic marijuana smoking on lung function, pulmonary function tests including single-breath carbon monoxide diffusing capacities were performed in 15 healthy women who smoked 1.7 +/- 1.4 (mean +/- SD) marijuana cigarettes per day for 235 +/- 135 days per year for a mean of 10.5 +/- 3.7 years. Control groups included 27 nonsmoking and 26 tobacco-smoking women. Results revealed that marijuana smoking with or without tobacco is associated with a reduction in the single-breath carbon monoxide diffusing capacity to 74 +/- 20 percent of predicted, which was significantly different from that in the nonsmoking control subjects (92 +/- 11 percent; p less than 0.05). The subset of subjects who smoked marijuana and tobacco had a further reduction of the single-breath carbon monoxide diffusing capacity to 65 +/- 17 percent, which was significantly different from that in both nonsmoking and smoking control subjects (80 +/- 7 percent). These results suggest that heavy marijuana smoking when added to tobacco smoking may damage the gas exchange surface of the lung.
Thompson, B. T. and C. A. Hales (1986). "Hypoxic pulmonary hypertension: acute and chronic." Heart Lung 15(5): 457-65.
Kradin, R. L., Y. Zhu, et al. (1986). "Response of pulmonary macrophages to hyperoxic pulmonary injury. Acquisition of surface fibronectin and fibrin/ogen and enhanced expression of a fibronectin receptor." Am J Pathol 125(2): 349-57.
The in vivo acquisition of coagulation plasma proteins on the surface of pulmonary macrophages was studied in guinea pigs breathing 95% oxygen. Fibrin/ogen and fibronectin appeared rapidly and concurrently on the surfaces of macrophages in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, which was judged by immunohistologic examination and flow cytometry. Pulmonary macrophages showed a parallel increase in the expression of a surface fibronectin receptor. Hyperoxic lung injury was accompanied by deposition of an extravascular pulmonary matrix of fibronectin and fibrin/ogen and depressed plasma levels of fibronectin. Binding to clot matrix proteins may lead to aggregation and retention of macrophages at sites of acute lung injury as well as alteration of cell function.
Hales, C. A., R. D. Brandstetter, et al. (1986). "Methylprednisolone on circulating eicosanoids and vasomotor tone after endotoxin." J Appl Physiol 61(1): 185-91.
Acute pulmonary and systemic vasomotor changes induced by endotoxin in dogs have been related, at least in part, to the production of eicosanoids such as the vasoconstrictor thromboxane and the vasodilator prostacyclin. Steroids in high doses, in vitro, inhibit activation of phospholipase A2 and prevent fatty acid release from cell membranes to enter the arachidonic acid cascade. We, therefore, administered methylprednisolone (40 mg/kg) to dogs to see if eicosanoid production and the ensuing vasomotor changes could be prevented after administration of 150 micrograms/kg of endotoxin. The stable metabolites of thromboxane B2 (TxB2) and 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha (6-keto-PGF1 alpha) were measured by radioimmunoassay. Methylprednisolone by itself did not alter circulating eicosanoids but when given 2.5 h before endotoxin not only failed to inhibit endotoxin-induced eicosanoid production but actually resulted in higher circulating levels of 6-keto-PGF1 alpha (P less than 0.05) compared with animals receiving endotoxin alone. Indomethacin prevented the steroid-enhanced concentrations of 6-keto-PGF1 alpha after endotoxin and prevented the greater fall (P less than 0.05) in systemic blood pressure and systemic vascular resistance with steroid plus endotoxin than occurred with endotoxin alone. Administration of methylprednisolone immediately before endotoxin resulted in enhanced levels (P less than 0.05) of both TxB2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha but with a fall in systemic blood pressure and vascular resistance similar to the animals pretreated by 2.5 h. In contrast to the early steroid group in which all of the hypotensive effect was due to eicosanoids, in the latter group steroids had an additional nonspecific effect. Thus, in vivo, high-dose steroids did not prevent endotoxin-induced increases in eicosanoids but actually increased circulating levels of TxB2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha with a physiological effect favoring vasodilation.
Custer, J. R. and C. A. Hales (1986). "Chemical sympathectomy decreases alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction in lambs but not in sheep." J Appl Physiol 60(1): 32-7.
We studied the role of the sympathetic nervous system in the augmented vasoconstrictor response of the newborn lamb, compared with the adult sheep, by producing a chemical sympathectomy with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA). Seven lambs, age 4-16 days, and five sheep, age 2 yr, were anesthetized and intubated with a double-lumen endotracheal tube, allowing ventilation of one lung with O2 to maintain systemic oxygenation while the contralateral lung was ventilated with N2 as a hypoxic challenge. Distribution of perfusion to each lung was evaluated using positron scintigraphy after inferior vena caval injections of 13N, a positron-emitting isotope. In the lambs, prior to 6-OHDA, distribution of perfusion to the test lung was 43 +/- 3% of total lung perfusion during bilateral O2 ventilation and fell with hypoxia to 24 +/- 2%, a reduction of 44 +/- 3% during N2 ventilation as compared with O2 ventilation. After 6-OHDA, hypoxic challenge reduced perfusion by only 22 +/- 2% (P less than 0.01 compared with pre-6-OHDA). In the adult sheep, hypoxic vasoconstriction reduced perfusion to the test lung by 28 +/- 2% but was unaffected by 6-OHDA. Absence of rise in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) or femoral artery pressure (Pfa) in response to Tyramine infusions after 6-OHDA confirmed complete sympathectomy in lambs and sheep. Persistent increases in PVR and Pfa to infusions of prostaglandin F2 alpha before and after 6-OHDA showed that the loss of alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction in the lamb was specific. Thus sympathetic innervation may contribute to the greater strength of alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction found in lambs than in sheep.
Venegas, J. G., J. Custer, et al. (1985). "Relationship for gas transport during high-frequency ventilation in dogs." J Appl Physiol 59(5): 1539-47.
Alveolar ventilation during high-frequency ventilation (HFV) was estimated from the washout of the positron-emitting isotope (nitrogen-13-labeled N2) from the lungs of anesthetized paralyzed supine dogs by use of a positron camera. HFV was delivered at a mean lung volume (VL) equal to the resting functional residual capacity with a ventilator that generated tidal volumes (VT) between 30 and 120 ml, independent of the animal’s lung impedance, at frequencies (f) from 2 to 25 Hz, with constant inspiratory and expiratory flows and an inspiration-to-expiration time ratio of unity. Specific ventilation (SPV), which is equivalent to ventilation per unit of compartment volume, was found to follow closely the relation: SPV = 1.9(VT/VL)2.1 X f. From this relation and from arterial PCO2 measurements we found an expression for the normocapnic settings of VT and f, given VL and body weight (W). We found that the VL was an important normalizing parameter in the sense that VT/VL yielded a better correlation (r = 0.91) with SPV/f than VT/W (r = 0.62) or VT alone (r = 0.8).
Hales, C. A. (1985). "The site and mechanism of oxygen sensing for the pulmonary vessels." Chest 88(4 Suppl): 235S-240S.
Lung vessels are unique in the body in that they react to hypoxia with constriction rather than dilatation. Whether this characteristic is inherent in the lung vessel or is due to an influence from a sensor in the surrounding lung parenchyma is not resolved. Recent data, however, showing that vascular hypoxia as well as airway hypoxia can produce pulmonary vasoconstriction and that the sensor for alveolar hypoxia is upstream in the precapillary vessels, allows but does not prove the precapillary pulmonary artery itself to be the O2 sensor. In addition, with the elimination of the mast cell as a necessary extravascular sensor for hypoxia at least in the mouse, there is no good candidate for an extravascular sensor for hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction.
Custer, J. R. and C. A. Hales (1985). "Influence of alveolar oxygen on pulmonary vasoconstriction in newborn lambs versus sheep." Am Rev Respir Dis 132(2): 326-31.
Fetal lung has vigorous hypoxic vasoconstriction and is exposed continuously to an O2 tension less than 20 mmHG, which is well below that experienced by adult lungs. We wondered if the newborn lamb, with muscular arteries similar to the fetus, might not have a different O2 tension for developing alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction in addition to having stronger vasoconstriction than the less muscular adult lung. Therefore, regional hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction in newborn lambs (mean of 5 days) and adult sheep (older than 2 yr) was compared at graded levels of alveolar oxygen tension. Animals were anesthetized with pentobarbital, and each main bronchus was cannulated to allow ventilation of one lung with N2 or other O2/N2 mixtures as a "hypoxic" challenge while ventilation of the other lung with O2 maintained systemic oxygenation. Distribution of perfusion to the 2 lungs during bilateral O2 ventilation was first determined with 13N and a positron camera. The lambs significantly (p less than 0.05) decreased the distribution of perfusion to the test lung compared with O2 control (PAO2, 620 +/- 15) by 44 +/- 1% SEM with PAO2 of 22 +/- 1 mmHg, 22 +/- 3% with PAO2 of 96 +/- 1 mmHg, and 12 +/- 2% with PAO2 of 360 +/- 3 mmHg in contrast to the sheep that significantly decreased the distribution of perfusion to the test lung compared with O2 control distribution of perfusion by only 22% at a PAO2 of 19 +/- 2 mmHg and not at higher alveolar O2 tensions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Sprince, N. L., R. I. Chamberlin, et al. (1984). "Respiratory disease in tungsten carbide production workers." Chest 86(4): 549-57.
We carried out a medical and environmental survey to evaluate respiratory disease at two tungsten carbide (TC) production plants. The study population of 290 subjects (19.2 percent of the total work force) was chosen to focus on those with the greatest potential exposures to cobalt, a binding agent which is probably the cause of interstitial fibrosis and airways disease in TC workers. We found peak air concentrations of cobalt exceeding 500 micrograms/m3 during many major steps in TC production. Nine subjects at plant A and two at plant B had interstitial infiltrates. Two of these nine from plant A had restriction (total lung capacity less than 80 percent of predicted). A lung biopsy specimen in one showed interstitial fibrosis. Two nonsmokers at plant A and one nonsmoker at plant B had obstructive defects. These results suggest that interstitial and obstructive lung disease occur in TC workers in association with elevated peak air concentrations of cobalt.
Zhu, Y. J., R. Kradin, et al. (1983). "Hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in the mast cell-deficient mouse." J Appl Physiol 54(3): 680-6.
Hales, C. A., R. L. Kradin, et al. (1983). "Impairment of hypoxic pulmonary artery remodeling by heparin in mice." Am Rev Respir Dis 128(4): 747-51.
Chronic hypoxia produces pulmonary artery hypertension and remodeling of pulmonary arteries with hypertrophy of smooth muscle in the media and extension of smooth muscle into more distal small precapillary arteries. The present study investigated the influence of heparin, an inhibitor of platelet-derived growth factor, and of the clotting cascade on this remodeling. Mice maintained in room air or 10% O2 for 26 days were treated with low-dose heparin at 75 units/kg or high dose heparin at 300 units/kg. Pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular hypertrophy developed in the hypoxic mice compared with the room air mice as evidenced by the greater (p less than 0.05) right ventricular systolic pressure (36 +/- 4 SEM versus 21 +/- 1 mmHg) and the increase (p less than 0.05) in right heart weight/left ventricular plus septal weight (35 +/- 1.6 SEM versus 25.2 +/- 1.3). Hypoxia also induced smooth muscle hypertrophy in small pulmonary arteries, with an increase (p less than 0.05) in the percent media thickness/vascular diameter from 5.7 +/- 1 SEM to 13.3 +/- 3 and an apparent decrease (p less than 0.05) in distal small pulmonary arteries from 4.4 +/- 0.2 SEM to 2.05 +/- 0.1 per 100 alveoli. High-dose heparin partially but significantly (p less than 0.05) prevented the pulmonary artery hypertension (right ventricular systolic pressure of 28 +/- 2 mmHg), the right ventricular hypertrophy (right ventricular weight/left ventricular plus septal weight of 30.1 +/- 1) and remodeling of distal small pulmonary arteries (media thickness/vascular diameter of 8.4 +/- 1%, small pulmonary artery/100 alveoli of 3.63 +/- 0.1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Braslow, N. M., C. A. Hales, et al. (1982). "Noninvasive cardiac output determination using inhaled oxygen-15-labeled carbon dioxide." J Appl Physiol 53(5): 1125-32.
Inhaled oxygen-15-labeled carbon dioxide (CO2*) is hydrated in the alveolar capillary blood to produce oxygen-15-labeled water (H2O*). This allows noninvasive delivery of a traceable indicator into the pulmonary circulation. Removal of oxygen-15 marker from the lung is a function of pulmonary perfusion. Two techniques were evaluated for computing cardiac output (CO) following single bolus inhalation of CO2*: 1) continuous monitoring of arterial blood activity through an external detector and 2) noninvasive positron imaging of oxygen-15-label washout from the chest and simultaneous emergence of activity in arterial blood. In seven mongrel dogs studied using technique 1, 46 determinations of CO were made from 1.2 to 8.0 l/min and compared with simultaneous indocyanine green dye-dilution determination. Correlation coefficient was 0.90 with slope of linear regression of 1.05. In 12 mongrel dogs studied using technique 2, 23 determinations of CO were made from 0.9 to 9.2 l/min and compared with simultaneous indocyanine green dye determination. Correlation coefficient was 0.985 (P less than 0.001) with slope of linear regression of 0.898. This noninvasive technique (2) for determination of CO is independent of assumptions regarding regional ventilation or perfusion of the lung and appears valid in animal studies.
Weiss, R. D., P. D. Goldenheim, et al. (1981). "Pulmonary dysfunction in cocaine smokers." Am J Psychiatry 138(8): 1110-2.
The authors report another complication of freebase cocaine smoking. They found a significant reduction in the carbon monoxide diffusing capacity in the lungs of two patients. This suggests that inhalation of the freebase of cocaine may damage the pulmonary gas exchange surface.
Hales, C. A., D. J. Kanarek, et al. (1981). "Regional edema formation in isolated perfused dog lungs." Circ Res 48(1): 121-7.
Studies using gravimetric analysis of lungs of frozen animals have suggested that the differences in pulmonary microvascular pressure between non-dependent and dependent lung do not influence the formation of regional pulmonary edema. We wondered if the inability to detect variation in regional extravascular lung water (EVLW) was due to the slow freezing process and, therefore, reassessed the distribution of EVLW in vertically suspended isolated perfused dog lungs with a radioisotopic technique that does not require freezing. Total lung water (TLW), blood or intravascular lung water (IVLW), and EVLW were measured in absolute quantities using a positron camera and the positron-emitting isotopes C15O as a blood label and H2(15)O as a total lung water label. Mean isotopic TLW in 17 lungs that were normal or moderately edematous (wet:dry ratio < 7) was 142 +/- 9 (SE) ml compared to the gravimetric estimate of 148 +/- 7 ml (r = 0.92) and isotopic EVLW was 64 +/- 6 ml compared to the gravimetric estimate of 70 +/- 6 ml (r = 0.8). Analysis of the distribution of regional isotopically measured EVLW in the 17 lungs in various states of spontaneous edema formation revealed a small non-dependent to dependent, gravity-related increase in percent regional EVLW compared to percent regional TLW, which did not vary with the degree of edema in the lung. Serial measurements of absolute regional EVLW in four lungs during spontaneously developing edema also failed to show a disproportionate increase in accumulation of EVLW in any lung zone. Thus, despite the wide variation in microvascular hydrostatic pressure between top and bottom of the vertical isolated lung, edema formation seems to be uniform.
Hales, C. A., L. Sonne, et al. (1981). "Role of thromboxane and prostacyclin in pulmonary vasomotor changes after endotoxin in dogs." J Clin Invest 68(2): 497-505.
Ahluwalia, B. D., G. L. Brownell, et al. (1981). "An index of pulmonary edema measured with emission computed tomography." J Comput Assist Tomogr 5(5): 690-4.
Positron camera and short-lived biological isotopes are used to obtain transverse sections of lung volume, blood volume, and total lung water of dog lungs to assess the degree of pulmonary edema in normal and edematous dogs. At equilibration with specific isotope, 30 equally spaced angular profiles of the distribution are collected to obtain transverse section images. Emission computed number is obtained in the lung and heart areas for the images obtained with an intravascular marker (11CO) and intra- and extravascular marker (C15O2). The emission computed number ratio of lung to heart for C15O2 images is an index that is related to degree of edema. Emission computed number related to extravascular water can be obtained from normalized (C15O2--11CO) scintigrams. The technique is noninvasive.
Miller, M. A. and C. A. Hales (1980). "Stability of alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction with intermittent hypoxia." J Appl Physiol 49(5): 846-50.
Repeated intermittent global hypoxia has been reported to markedly enhance hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction in dogs. We have reexamined this phenomenon but with intermittent unilateral alveolar hypoxia, avoiding complications of systemic hypoxemia. Fifteen anesthetized dogs were intubated with a double-lumen endotracheal tube, allowing separate ventilation of one lung with 100% N2 as a hypoxic challenge and the other lung with 100% O2 to maintain adequate systemic oxygenation. Distribution of lung perfusion was determined with intravenous 133Xe and external chest detectors. Each dog alternately breathed air or the unilateral alveolar hypoxia combination for 15 min each for a total of 12 hypoxic challenges or 6 h. Two groups emerged on the basis of the strength of their vasoconstrictor responses to successive hypoxic challenge. In group I (n = 6), perfusion to the hypoxic lung decreased 29% with the first challenge and decreased comparably with successive challenges. In group II, vasoconstriction was initially weak with perfusion decreasing only 5%, but perfusion decreased further with time alone (n = 5) or successive challenges (n = 4), falling 35% on the 12th challenge (comparable to group I). Delayed achievement of hypoxic vasoconstriction in group II may be secondary to a vasodilating prostanoid that disappears with time.
Javaheri, S. and C. A. Hales (1980). "Sarcoidosis: a cause of innominate vein obstruction and massive pleural effusion." Lung 157(2): 81-5.
Nichols, A. B., S. Cochavi, et al. (1979). "Resolution rates of pulmonary embolism assessed by serial positron imaging with inhaled O-15-labeled carbon dioxide." J Nucl Med 20(4): 281-6.
Embolic obstruction of pulmonary blood flow results in delayed regional clearance of inhaled C15O2. Focally retained C15O2 appears as zones of increased O-15 activity on serial positron scintigrams, which show the locations of occluded pulmonary segments. Inhalation of C15O2, with serial imaging by a multicrystal positron camera, was used to locate and assess the magnitude of occluded pulmonary segments in eight patients with arteriographically documented pulmonary emboli. The imaging with C15O2 inhalation was repeated after 1 wk of i.v. heparin therapy to evaluate the ability of this technique to determine resolution rates of pulmonary emboli during anticoagulant therapy. In all patients, zones of increased C15O2 activity corresponded with sites of emboli identified arteriographically. After 1 wk of continuous heparin therapy, zones of focally retained C15O2 were totally resolved in three patients, diminished in four, and unchanged in one. The regional pulmonary clearance rate of C15O2 was delayed over embolized pulmonary segments in all patients (men clearance half-time = 42.2 sec +/- 11.2 s.e.m.) and improved after heparin therapy (13.9 +/- 3.9 sec; p less than 0.05). Serial C15O2 inhalation imaging is a rapid noninvasive radionuclide technique for detection of pulmonary emboli. It can be repeated at frequent intervals to assess the resolution of emboli during anticoagulant therapy.
Miller, M. A. and C. A. Hales (1979). "Role of cytochrome P-450 in alveolar hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction in dogs." J Clin Invest 64(2): 666-73.
Hales, C. A. and D. M. Westphal (1979). "Pulmonary hypoxic vasoconstriction: not affected by chemical sympathectomy." J Appl Physiol 46(3): 529-33.
The influence of chemical sympathectomy with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) on regional alveolar hypoxic vasconstriction and on global hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction was investigated. In eight dogs a double-lumened endotracheal tube allowed ventilation of one lung with nitrogen as an alveolar hypoxic challenge while ventilation of the other lung with 100% O2 maintained adequate systemic oxygenation. Distribution of perfusion to the two lungs was determined with 133Xe and external counters. Mean perfusion to the test lung was 50.9 +/- 4.9% of total lung perfusion on room air and decreased by 32.4% (P smaller than 0.01) during alveolar hypoxia. Following 6-OHDA the test lung continued to reduce perfusion during alveolar hypoxia by 27.3%. In five dogs global hypoxia induced a 106% increase in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) prior to 6-OHDA and a 90% increase in PVR after 6-OHDA. After 6-OHDA no rise in PRV or systemic blood pressure occurred in response to tyramine, confirming effective sympathectomy by the 6-OHDA. Thus, sympathectomy with 6-OHDA failed to substantially block regional alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction or global hypoxic pulmonary vasconstriction.
Blumenstock, D. A., F. D. Cannon, et al. (1979). "Pulmonary function of DLA-nonidentical lung allografts in dogs treated with lethal total-body irradiation, autologous bone marrow transplantation, and methotrexate." Transplantation 28(3): 223-7.
Nichols, A. B., S. Cochavi, et al. (1978). "Scintigraphic detection of pulmonary emboli by serial positron imaging of inhaled 15O-labeled carbon dioxide." N Engl J Med 299(6): 279-84.
Inhaled radioactive carbon dioxide is retained in pulmonary blood distal to embolic obstruction and appears as an area of increased radioactivity that delineates the site and magnitude of the affected zone. The scintigraphic detection of pulmonary emboli by serial imaging of inhaled carbon dioxide labeled with cyclotron-produced 15O2 was evaluated in 27 patients undergoing conventional pulmonary ventilation/perfusion imaging and pulmonary arteriography. Fifteen patients proved to have pulmonary emboli on arteriography. Sensitivity (87%) and specificity (92%) rates for inhalation imaging were superior to those of conventional ventilation/perfusion imaging (P less than 0.05). Clearance of 15O2 activity was markedly delayed over embolized pulmonary segments (mean half time of 47.0 +/- 11.1 seconds [S.E.M.]) in comparison to normal segments (mean of 3.6 +/- 0.08 seconds; P less than 0.001). Pulmonary imaging by this method provides an approach to the detection of pulmonary emboli that is relatively sensitive and specific and permits analysis of persisting perfusion in embolized pulmonary segments. A major practical limitation, however, is the necessity of a nearby cyclotron.
Hales, C. A., E. T. Rouse, et al. (1978). "Influence of aspirin and indomethacin on variability of alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction." J Appl Physiol 45(1): 33-9.
Alveolar hypoxia induces pulmonary vasoconstriction but the strength of alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction (AHV) is variable even within the same species. The influence of aspirin and indomethacin, cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors, was examined in two groups of dogs, those with weak AHV and those with vigorous AHV. A double-lumen endotracheal tube allowed ventilation of one lung with nitrogen as an alveolar hypoxic stimulus and ventilation of the other lung with O2 to maintain systemic oxygenation. Perfusion to each lung was measured with xenon-133 and external counters. In weak reactors both aspirin and indomethacin induced fourfold enhancement of AHV (P less than 0.01), whereas no significant influence on vigorous reactors was noted. Cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors also produced enhanced reactivity in the isolated lung to alveolar hypoxia and prostaglandin F2alpha but not to angiotensin II and norepinephrine. Aspirin-enhanced AHV in the isolated lung could not be diminished with blockade of angiotensin II receptors or of alpha receptors. In summary, weak AHV in intact or isolated dog lung may be due to an excess of a prostaglandin or prostacyclin vasodilator.
Hales, C. A. and D. Westphal (1978). "Hypoxemia following the administration of sublingual nitroglycerin." Am J Med 65(6): 911-8.
Nitroglycerin, 0.6 mg sublingually, was given to 27 nonasthmatic subjects with varying degrees of airways dysfunction to determine the effect on arterial oxygenation. In six normal subjects, the partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood (Pao2) transiently decreased by 9 mm Hg (p less than 0.05) and in eight subjects with only small airways dysfunction, the Pa02 decreased by 14 mm Hg (p less than 0.0001). The alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient on oxygen increased by only 11 mm Hg indicating that the decrease in room air Pao2 was primarily due to worsening ventilation-perfusion mismatch and not to an increase in shunt. Thirteen subjects with advanced obstructive or restrictive lung disease experienced a much lesser decrease in Pao2 of 4 mm Hg. Data are presented on xenon perfusion studies of a dog model of unilateral alveolar hypoxia that suggest the worsening ventilation-perfusion ratio seen in the human subjects after the administration of nitroglycerin could be due to loss of the lung's ability to vasoconstrict in regions of alveolar hypoxia and shift perfusion to better ventilated regions of the lung.
Hales, C. A., E. Rouse, et al. (1977). "Role of prostaglandins in alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction." Respir Physiol 29(2): 151-62.
The role of prostaglandins as mediators of alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction was investigated in dogs with the use of the prostaglandin synthesis inhibitors, aspirin and indomethacin. Alveolar hypoxia was induced by inserting double-lumened endotracheal tube into the carina and ventilating one lung with nigrogen while maintaining normal systemic oxygenation with 100% O(2) ventilation to the other lung. Relative perfusion to each lung was determined with 133Xenon and external counters. Infusions up to 25 mg/kg of indomethacin and up to 250 mg/kg of aspirin did not block the shift in perfusion from the alveolar hypoxic lung. In fact, the shift in perfusion from the alveolar hypoxic lung was slightly augmented by aspirin (P = 0.03). Thus, no positive role was demonstrated in the dog for prostaglandins in producing the vasoconstriction of alveolar hypoxia.
Hales, C. A. and H. Kazemi (1977). "Clinical significance of pulmonary function tests. Pulmonary function after uncomplicated myocardial infarction." Chest 72(3): 350-8.
Derangement of pulmonary function following myocardial infarction is related to the severity of hemodynamic dysfunction. Abnormalities of pulmonary function appear even in patients without clinical or radiologic evidence of congestive failure. There is a reduction in vital capacity and rates of air flow. There is evidence for dysfunction of "small airways" and diminished ventilation to dependent parts of the lung. Total lung capacity may be normal or reduced, and residual volume may be increased slightly in uncomplicated myocardial infarction. Residual volume falls with more pronounced pulmonary congestion and edema. Distribution of pulmonary perfusion is altered after myocardial infarction, with a shift of perfusion away from the dependent parts of the lung (bases) towards the apices. Pulmonary gas exchange is impaired, with hypoxemia (due to both ventilation-perfusion inequality and increased shunting); and the diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide is diminished. Dead space is increased. The basic pathophysiologic mechanism responsible for abnormalities of pulmonary function is increased pulmonary water, which may be very minimal with uncomplicated myocardial infarction and stay primarily in the pulmonary interstitial space, but becomes progressively more severe with eventual alveolar flooding and marked impairment of pulmonary function.
Hales, C. A., E. T. Rouse, et al. (1977). "Failure of saralasin acetate, a competitive inhibitor of angiotensin II, to diminish alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction in the dog." Cardiovasc Res 11(6): 541-6.
The role of angiotensin II in the pulmonary vasoconstriction induced by alveolar hypoxia was investigated with the competitive inhibitor of angiotensin, saralasin acetate. Unilateral alveolar hypoxia was induced in dogs by ventilation of one lung with 100% N2 through a double lumened endotracheal cannula while maintaining adequate systemic oxygenation by ventilating the other lung with 1oo% O2. Pulmonary perfusion was monitored with 133Xe and external detectors. In 8 dogs perfusion to the test lung on room air before N2 ventilation was 49.2% (SEM +/- 3.8) of total lung perfusion. After 7 min of nitrogen ventilation, perfusion to that lung was 35.6% (SEM +/- 2.9) of cardiac output (P less than 0.001), a reduction of 27.5% (SEM +/- 2.4). After infusion of 6--24 microgram.kg-1/min of saralasin acetate, beginning 2 min before the alveolar hypoxic challenge and continuing through it, unilateral alveolar hypoxia continued to reduce perfusion to that lung by 28.8% (P = 0.6 from control). In 2 dogs a higher infusion of 60 microgram.kg-1/min failed to reduce the alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction and in 2 dogs a 15 min infusion of 6 microgram.kg-1 of saralasin acetate before alveolar hypoxia and continuing through it, still failed to inhibit alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction. Thus, no role was demonstrated for angiotensin II in acute alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction of the dog.
Blumenstock, D. A., F. D. Cannon, et al. (1977). "Allotransplantation of the lung without immunosuppression after transplantation. II. Combined autotransplantation of bone marrow and allotransplantation of lung." Transplantation 24(3): 194-200.
Hales, C. A., R. Gibbons, et al. (1976). "Determinants of regional distribution of a bolus inhaled from residual volume." J Appl Physiol 41(3): 400-8.
The volume of lung at residual volume (RV) which fails to receive an inhaled tracer bolus (EXV) was quantitated in 13 normals by comparison of a scintigram of the distribution of a tracer bolus inhaled from RV (BORV) with a scintigram at RV of lung equilibrated with the tracer (EQRV). EXV was found in the dependent lung in the erect position in all subjects but also occurred to a lesser degree at the apex in 11 of 13 subjects. Basal EXV ranged from 1 to 7% of TLC, and unlike apical EXV increased with age (r= 0.91, P less than 0.01). EXV in the decubitus position shifted largely to the dependent lung with none remaining in the original erect apical and basal locations, demonstrating that gravity determined EXV location. Nitrous oxide, which is highly diffusible, failed in four subjects to carry the tracer to basal EXV even though perfusion was documented to persist to this area, implying basal EXV airways were closed, not narrowed. In one of the four subjects apical EXV was readily definable. Nitrous oxide carried tracer into this region, implying patent apical EXV airways.
Hales, C. A., B. Ahluwalia, et al. (1975). "Strength of pulmonary vascular response to regional alveolar hypoxia." J Appl Physiol 38(6): 1083-7.
Regional alveolar hypoxia in the lung induces regional pulmonary vasoconstriction which diverts blood flow from the hypoxic area. However, the predominant determinant of the distribution of perfusion in the normal erect lung is gravity so that more perfusion occurs at the base than at the apex. To determine the strength of the regional alveolar hypoxic response in diverting flow with or against the gravity gradient a divided tracheal cannula was placed in anesthetized dogs and unilateral alveolar hypoxia created by venilating one lung with nitrogen while ventilating the other lung with oxygen to preserve normal systemic oxygentation. Scintigrams of the distribution of perfusion obtained with intravenous 13-N and the MGH positron camera revealed a 34 and 32 per cent decrease in perfusion to the hypoxic lung in the supine and erect positions and a 26 per cent decrease in the decubitus position with the hypoxic lung dependent (P equal to 0.94 from supine shift), indicating nearly equal vasoconstriction with shift of perfusion away from the hypoxic lung in all positions. Analysis of regional shifts in perfusion revealed an equal vasoconstrictor response from apex to base in the supine position but a greater response in the lower lung zones in the erect position where perfusion was also greatest.
Hales, C. A. and H. Kazemi (1975). "Role of histamine in the hypoxic vascular response of the lung." Respir Physiol 24(1): 81-8.
The lung vasculature responds to alveolar hypoxia by constriction and when the hypoxia is localized to one region of the lung, vasoconstriction is also localized to that region. Histamine has been alleged to have a role in the vasoconstrictor response with generalized alveolar and thus systemic hypoxia, but the role for histamine is not clear in localized alveolar hypoxia. Studies were, therefore, undertaken to determine the contribution of histamine to the localized pulmonary vasoconstrictor response to hypoxia. A divided tracheal cannula was used in anesthetized dogs which allowed for ventilation of one lung with oxygen to maintain normal systemic oxygenation (mean PaO2 =73 mm Hg) while the other lung was ventilated with nitrogen as an alveolar hypoxic stimulus. Perfusion to each lung was determined with the 133Xe technique utilizing external counters over the chest. Perfusion (Q) was decreased by 32% (P = 0.002) to the hypoxic lung after 10 minutes of unilateral nitrogen breathing. After intravenous infusion of 20 mg of chlorpheniramine maleate, a potent antihistamine, the decrease in Q to the hypoxic lung was unchanged at 30%. After 40-100 mg chlorpheniramine the decrease in perfusion was again unchanged at 34%. Therefore a significant role was not demonstrated for histamine in the regional pulmonary vasoconstrictor response to alveolar hypoxia in the absence of systemic hypoxemia.