4.5 Article

Lung ventilation injures areas with discrete alveolar flooding, in a surface tension-dependent fashion

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 117, Issue 7, Pages 788-796

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00569.2014

Keywords

acute respiratory distress syndrome; ventilation injury; surfactant; plasma proteins; surface tension

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grant [HL-113577]
  2. Stony Wold-Herbert Fund

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With proteinaceous-liquid flooding of discrete alveoli, a model of the edema pattern in the acute respiratory distress syndrome, lung inflation over expands aerated alveoli adjacent to flooded alveoli. Theoretical considerations suggest that the overexpansion may be proportional to surface tension, T. Yet recent evidence indicates proteinaceous edema liquid may not elevate T. Thus whether the overexpansion is injurious is not known. Here, working in the isolated, perfused rat lung, we quantify fluorescence movement from the vasculature to the alveolar liquid phase as a measure of overdistension injury to the alveolar-capillary barrier. We label the perfusate with fluorescence; micropuncture a surface alveolus and instill a controlled volume of nonfluorescent liquid to obtain a micropunctured-but-aerated region (control group) or a region with discrete alveolar flooding; image the region at a constant transpulmonary pressure of 5 cmH(2)O; apply five ventilation cycles with a positive end-expiratory pressure of 0-20 cmH(2)O and tidal volume of 6 or 12 ml/kg; return the lung to a constant transpulmonary pressure of 5 cmH(2)O; and image for an additional 10 min. In aerated areas, ventilation is not injurious. With discrete alveolar flooding, all ventilation protocols cause sustained injury. Greater positive end-expiratory pressure or tidal volume increases injury. Furthermore, we determine T and find injury increases with T. Inclusion of either plasma proteins or Survanta in the flooding liquid does not alter T or injury. Inclusion of 2.7-10% albumin and 1% Survanta together, however, lowers T and injury. Contrary to expectation, albumin inclusion in our model facilitates exogenous surfactant activity.

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