Retinoic acid treatment abrogates elastase-induced pulmonary emphysema in rats
- 1 June 1997
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Medicine
- Vol. 3 (6) , 675-677
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nm0697-675
Abstract
Pulmonary emphysema is a common disease in which destruction of the lung's gas-exchange structures (alveoli) leads to inadequate oxygenation, disability and frequently death; lung transplantation provides its only remediation. Because treatment of normal rats with all-trans-retinoic acid increases the number of alveoli, we tested whether a similar effect would occur in rats with emphysema. Elastase was instilled into rat lungs, producing changes characteristic of human and experimental emphysema: increased lung volume reflecting a loss of lung elastic recoil, larger but fewer alveoli and diminished volume-corrected alveolar surface area due to destruction of alveolar walls. Treatment with all-trans-retinoic acid reversed these changes providing nonsurgical remediation of emphysema and suggesting the possibility of a similar effect in humans.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evidence-Based Health Policy—Lessons from the Global Burden of Disease StudyScience, 1996
- Formation of Pulmonary Alveoli and Gas-Exchange Surface Area: Quantitation and RegulationAnnual Review of Physiology, 1996
- Postnatal rat lung retinoic acid receptor (RAR) mRNA expression and effects of dexamethasone on RAR β mRNAPediatric Pulmonology, 1995
- Turning back the clock: retinoic acid modifies intrinsic aging changes.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1994
- Morphometric Analysis of the Lung in Bronchopulmonary DysplasiaAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1991
- Postnatal development of alveoli. Regulation and evidence for a critical period in rats.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1985
- Internal surface area and other measurements in emphysemaThorax, 1967
- Comparative Quantitative Morphology of the Mammalian Lung: Diffusing AreaNature, 1963
- Physiopathologic aspects of chronic pulmonary emphysemaThe American Journal of Medicine, 1951
- THE ELASTIC PROPERTIES OF THE EMPHYSEMATOUS LUNG AND THEIR CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1934