Effect of indomethacin on pulmonary vascular response to ventilation of fetal goats

Abstract
The effect of indomethacin treatment of the pulmonary vasodilation caused by ventilation of the fetal lung with air was evaluated in anesthetized, exteriorized, fetal goats by means of an open-chest, pump-perfused lung preparation. The decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance that occurs when the fetal lung is ventilated with air consists of two components: 1) a rapid decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance during the first 30 s of ventilation; 2) a slower decline, which continues through the first 10-20 min or more of ventilation. Indomethacin has no effect on the first component. The second component is absent following indomethacin pretreatment. The effect of indomethacin treatment is more pronounced in immature fetuses (less than 90% gestation) than in mature fetuses. Prostaglandin synthase activity appears to be important in the pulmonary vasodilation caused by ventilation of the fetal lungs with air.