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Departments of 1 Anesthesiology
and Critical Care Medicine,
6 Pediatrics,
3 Pharmacology, and
4 Pathology,
We postulated that
prolonged exposure to intermittent positive-pressure ventilation (IPPV)
with high pressure (HIPPV) alone without hyperoxia promotes the
development of airway hyperresponsiveness and remodeling. To test this
hypothesis, young rats were ventilated under halothane anesthesia with
HIPPV (maximum inspiratory pressure at 32-35
cmH2O in 70% nitrous oxide and
30% O2) for 3.5-4 h daily for 6 days. Control rats were ventilated with low IPPV (maximum inspiratory pressure < 13 cmH2O)
during the same time period with the same gas mixture. With the use of
tracheal rings isolated from these rats and a setup in tissue baths,
contractile responses to carbachol
(10
6 to
10
2 mM),
5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT;
10
9 to
10
5 mM) and KCl (1-100
mM) were examined isometrically. In tracheal rings from HIPPV rats
compared with low-pressure IPPV rats, the concentration tension curves
showed a significantly enhanced response to all agonists
(P < 0.005). Sensitivity to
carbachol, 5-HT, and KCl was also significantly increased
(P < 0.05) compared with control
rats as evidenced by decreases in
EC50. Maximum tension (reactivity)
to 5-HT and KCl in the HIPPV group increased significantly (P < 0.05), and there was a trend
(P = 0.07) toward increased reactivity
to carbachol in this group as well. Histological examinations of
tracheal rings demonstrated epithelial squamous metaplasia in the HIPPV
group. Morphometric studies demonstrated tracheal smooth muscle
thickening (P < 0.05) without
changes in the thickness of the mucosa or the lamina propria. When
contractile responses were normalized for the smooth muscle
cross-sectional area (i.e., stress), reactivity to all contractile
agents was reduced, whereas reactivity to 5-HT still demonstrated
significant increase (P < 0.005).
Sensitivity of tracheal segments to all three agents was not affected
by this normalization. These findings suggest that prolonged exposure
to HIPPV without hyperoxia and the resultant overdistension of lung
tissues (volutrauma) induced airway remodeling and airway
hyperreactivity.
airway hyperresponsiveness; volutrauma; carbachol; 5-hydroxytryptamine
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