| Literature DB >> 25289037 |
Akinaga Sonoda1, Norihisa Nitta1, Keiko Tsuchiya1, Hideji Otani1, Shobu Watanabe1, Kenichi Mukaisho2, Yuki Tomozawa1, Yukihiro Nagatani1, Shinichi Ohta1, Masashi Takahashi1, Kiyoshi Murata1.
Abstract
Acute lung injury, a critical illness characterized by acute respiratory failure with bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, remains unresponsive to current treatments. The condition involves injury to the alveolar capillary barrier, neutrophil accumulation and the induction of proinflammatory cytokines followed by lung fibrosis. In the present study, a rabbit model of bleomycin-induced acute lung injury was established to examine the effects of asialoerythropoietin (AEP), an agent with tissue-protective activities, on pulmonary inflammation. Six Japanese white rabbits were randomly divided into two equal groups. Acute lung injury was induced in all rabbits by intratracheally injecting bleomycin. The control group was injected with bleomycin only; the experimental (AEP) group was injected intravenously with AEP (80 μg/kg) prior to the bleomycin injection. Computed tomography (CT) studies were performed seven days later. The CT inflammatory scores of areas exhibiting abnormal density and the pathological inflammatory scores were recorded as a ratio on a 7×7 mm grid. The CT and pathological inflammatory scores were significantly different between the control and AEP groups [122±10 and 16.3±1.5 (controls) vs. 71±8.5 and 9.7±1.4 (AEP), respectively; P<0.01]. Thus, the present study revealed that AEP prevents bleomycin-induced acute lung injury in rabbits.Entities:
Keywords: acute lung injury; asialoerythropoietin; bleomycin; rabbit; score
Year: 2014 PMID: 25289037 PMCID: PMC4186348 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2014.1960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1Areas with abnormal density on the computed tomography images. Consolidation, homogeneous ground-glass opacity and reticulolinear shadows were scored as a ratio of the grid as follows: 0, normal; 1, abnormal area <1/4; 2, abnormal area ≥1/4 but <1/2; and 3, abnormal area ≥1/2.
Figure 2Scoring of pathological specimens. Non-overlapping fields from each lung specimen were evaluated for inflammation as follows: 0, no inflammation; 1, focal interstitial infiltrates; 2, diffuse interstitial infiltrates; 3, focal alveolar infiltrates; and 4, confluent alveolar infiltrates. Microscopic images (hematoxylin and eosin staining; magnification, ×100).
Figure 3WBC counts in the AEP-treated and -untreated rabbits. The WBC counts were lower in the AEP-treated rabbits than those in the control rabbits (21.3±33.6 vs. 62.3±15.5 ng/ml, respectively; P=0.127). WBC, white blood cell; AEP, asialoerythropoietin.
Figure 4Inflammatory scores in the AEP-treated and -untreated rabbits. The inflammatory score was significantly higher in the control rabbits than that in the AEP-treated rabbits (122±10 vs. 71±8.5, respectively; P=0.003). AEP, asialoerythropoietin.
Figure 5Pathological inflammatory scores. The inflammatory scores were higher in the control rabbits than those in the AEP-treated rabbits (16.3±1.5 vs. 9.7±1.4, respectively; P=0.005). AEP, asialoerythropoietin.