AGE-RELATED-CHANGES IN ELASTIC FIBERS AND ELASTIN OF LUNG

Abstract
The effect of age on the lung elastic tissue of inbred BALB/c mice was studied. Static compliance of excised lungs increased with age. Morphometrically determined total elastic fiber length increased with lung expansion in age- and sex-matched mice (r [correlation coefficient] = 0.83, P < 0.001), indicating an axial extension of elastic fibers. Total elastic fiber length of aging lungs fixed at a distending pressure of 15 cm H2O showed no significant change despite an age-related increase in lung volume (male, r = 0.96, P < 0.001; female, r = 0.95, P < 0.001). The correlative finding of decreased elastin content (r = -0.87, P < 0.001) indicates that there is a loss of elastic fibers in the aging lung. The absence of pseudoelastin fibers, as demonstrated by histochemical techniques, probably accounts for the observed differences in elastin content of aging human and mouse lungs.