Pulmonary intravascular macrophages and hemodynamic effects of liposomes in sheep
- 1 March 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 64 (3) , 1143-1152
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1988.64.3.1143
Abstract
We studied the effects of liposomes on the pulmonary circulation of sheep and found a close correlation between liposome retention in the lung and the intravascular macrophages. A test dose of liposomes (5.5 .mu.mol of total lipids) injected intravenously transiently increased pulmonary arterial pressure from 24 .+-. 2 to 55 .+-. 16 (SD) cmH2O. The pulmonary arterial pressure responses were dose dependent and reproducible. The rise in pulmonary arterial pressure was blocked completely by indomethacin and 75% by a thromboxane synthase inhibitor. Systemic arterial thromboxane B2 concentration increased from a base-line level of < 50 pg/ml to 250 .+-. 130 pg/ml at the peak of the pressor response. Larger doses of liposomes (220 .mu.mol of total lipids) infused intravenously over 1 h increased pulmonary arterial pressure maximally within the first 15 min. Lymph flow increased and lymph protein concentration decreased, suggesting venoconstriction. Over half (62.4 .+-. 15.7%) of 111In-labeled liposomes remained in the lung after 2 h. Fluorescence and transmission electron microscopy showed that > 90% of the liposomes were associated with mononuclear cells in the lumen of the alveolar wall microvessels. We conclude that liposomes affect pulmonary arterial pressure transiently by a mechanism involving the arachidonate cascade, principally thromboxane. Our observations suggest that a population of pulmonary intravascular macrophages is likely to be the source of the thromboxane and the pulmonary hemodynamic and lymph dynamic changes that occur in a dose-dependent fashion, although interactions between liposomes, leukocytes, or endothelial cells, in addition to the macrophages, have not been completely ruled out. We believe this is the first demonstration that pulmonary intravascular macrophages may be the source of the arachidonate metabolites rather than endothelial cells, neutrophils, or perivascular interstitial cells.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
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