Literature DB >> 16675780

Atelectasis causes alveolar injury in nonatelectatic lung regions.

Shinya Tsuchida1, Doreen Engelberts, Vanya Peltekova, Natalie Hopkins, Helena Frndova, Paul Babyn, Colin McKerlie, Martin Post, Paul McLoughlin, Brian P Kavanagh.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: Many authors have suggested that the mechanism by which atelectasis contributes to injury is through the repetitive opening and closing of distal airways in lung regions that are atelectatic. However, neither the topographic nor mechanistic relationships between atelectasis and distribution of lung injury are known.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate how atelectasis contributes to ventilator-induced lung injury.
METHODS: Surfactant depletion was performed in anesthetized rats that were then allocated to noninjurious or injurious ventilation for 90 min. MEASUREMENTS: Lung injury was quantified by gas exchange, compliance, histology, wet-to-dry weight, and cytokine expression, and its distribution by histology, stereology, cytokine mRNA expression, in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry. Functional residual capacity, percent atelectasis, and injury-induced lung water accumulation were measured using gravimetric and volumetric techniques. MAIN
RESULTS: Atelectasis occurred in the dependent lung regions. Injurious ventilation was associated with alveolar and distal airway injury, while noninjurious ventilation was not. With injurious ventilation, alveolar injury (i.e., histology, myeloperoxidase protein expression, quantification, and localization of cytokine mRNA expression) was maximal in nondependent regions, whereas distal airway injury was equivalent in atelectatic and nonatelectatic regions.
CONCLUSIONS: These data support the notion that lung injury associated with atelectasis involves trauma to the distal airways. We provide topographic and biochemical evidence that such distal airway injury is not localized solely to atelectatic areas, but is instead generalized in both atelectatic and nonatelectatic lung regions. In contrast, alveolar injury associated with atelectasis does not occur in those areas that are atelectatic but occurs instead in remote nonatelectatic alveoli.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16675780     DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200506-1006OC

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med        ISSN: 1073-449X            Impact factor:   21.405


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