Re-expansion Pulmonary Edema: A Potential Role for Free Radicals in Its Pathogenesis
- 1 May 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Review of Respiratory Disease
- Vol. 137 (5) , 1165-1171
- https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/137.5.1165
Abstract
Re-expansion pulmonary edema (RPE) has been attributed to decreased lung interstitial pressures from a variety of mechanisms. Because some recent studies have implicated mechanisms that increase microvascular permeability. In RPE, we tested whether the edema were due to free radical generation during re-expansion and reoxygenation of the collapsed lung. We used a rabbit model of RPE to test the effects of intracellular (dimethylthiourea) or extracellular (catalase) oygen metabolite scavengers. Allopurinol was administered separately to determine whether xanthine oxidase was an important source of superoxide in this model. Edema was quantitated both gravimetrically and histologically, and lung xanthine oxidase activity was measured using a sensitive fluorometric assay with pterin as substrate. The results suggest indirectly that OH .cntdot. or H2O2 (derived from O2) contribute to the well-documented increase in lung permeability in RPE because dimethylthiourea, dimethylthiourea plus catalase, or catalase alone inhibited the edema to various degrees. Further, we observed histologically that increased numbers of neutrophils were present in re-expanded lungs and that neutrophil infiltration appeared to be diminished by antioxidant administration. Allopurinol did not decrease the edema, because xanthine oxidase activity in rabbit lung tissue is extremely low. We speculate that free radical generation in lung tissue contributes to the pathogenesis of RPE, although reinitiation of lung perfusion and ventilation requires a rapid change in intrathoracic pressure.This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome in Patients with Severe NeutropeniaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Dimethylthiourea decreases acute lung edema in phorbol myristate acetate-treated rabbitsJournal of Applied Physiology, 1986
- Involvement of hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical in the ‘oxygen paradox’: Reduction of creatine kinase release by catalase, allopurinol or deferoxamine, but not by superoxide dismutase**Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1985
- Protection against oxygen toxicity by intravenous injection of liposome-entrapped catalase and superoxide dismutase.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1984
- Pulmonary Blood Pressure and Flow during Atelectasis in the DogAnesthesiology, 1983
- Hemodynamic and Pulmonary Edema Protein Measurements in a Case of Reexpansion Pulmonary EdemaChest, 1982
- Aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase-functional and evolutionary relationshipsBiochemical Pharmacology, 1978
- The role of endotoxin in protection of adult rats from oxygen-induced lung toxicity.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1978
- Enzymatic basis for bioenergetic differences of alveolar versus peritoneal macrophages and enzyme regulation by molecular O2.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1977
- The Development and Use of An Intravenous Preparation of AllopurinolThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1968