Mechanical ventilation has been demonstrated to exacerbate lung injury, and a sufficiently high tidal volume can induce injury in otherwise healthy lungs. However, it remains controversial whether injurious ventilation per se, without preceding lung injury, can initiate cytokine-mediated pulmonary inflammation. To address this, we developed an in vivo mouse model of acute lung injury produced by high tidal volume (Vt) ventilation. Anesthetized C57BL6 mice were ventilated at high Vt (34.5 +/- 2.9 ml/kg, mean +/- SD) for a duration of 156 +/- 17 min until mean blood pressure fell below 45 mmHg (series 1); high Vt for 120 min (series 2); or low Vt (8.8 +/- 0.5 ml/kg) for 120 or 180 min (series 3). High Vt produced progressive lung injury with a decrease in respiratory system compliance, increase in protein concentration in lung lavage fluid, and lung pathology showing hyaline membrane formation. High-Vt ventilation was associated with increased TNF-alpha in lung lavage fluid at the early stage of injury (series 2) but not the later stage (series 1). In contrast, lavage fluid macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2) was increased in all high-Vt animals. Lavage fluid from high-Vt animals contained bioactive TNF-alpha by WEHI bioassay. Low-Vt ventilation induced minimal changes in physiology and pathology with negligible TNF-alpha and MIP-2 proteins and TNF-alpha bioactivity. These results demonstrate that high-Vt ventilation in the absence of underlying injury induces intrapulmonary TNF-alpha and MIP-2 expression in mice. The apparently transient nature of TNF-alpha upregulation may help explain previous controversy regarding the involvement of cytokines in ventilator-induced lung injury.
Wilson, Michael R., Sharmila Choudhury, and Masao Takata. Pulmonary inflammation induced by high-stretch ventilation is mediated by tumor necrosis factor signaling in mice. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 288: L599 -L607, 2005. First published October 15, 2004; doi:10.1152/ajplung.00304.2004.-Although high-stretch mechanical ventilation has been demonstrated to induce lung inflammation, the roles of soluble mediators, in particular TNF, remain controversial. We have previously shown in mice that high-stretch ventilation, in the absence of preceding lung injury, induces expression of bioactive TNF in lung lavage fluid early in the course of injury, but the biological significance of this, if any, has yet to be determined. We therefore investigated the pulmonary inflammatory response to a transient period of high-stretch ventilation in anesthetized mice lacking TNF receptors and mice treated with anti-TNF antibodies. A standardized stretch-induced lung injury (assessed by lung mechanics, blood gases, and lavage protein content), followed by noninjurious low-stretch ventilation for 3 h, produced significant alveolar neutrophil infiltration in wild-type mice. However, neutrophil recruitment was substantially attenuated in TNF receptor double knockout mice and in wild-type mice treated with intratracheal anti-TNF antibody. This attenuation was not associated with decreased concentrations of neutrophil attractant CXC chemokines (macrophage inflammatory protein-2 and keratinocyte-derived chemokine) in lavage fluid. In contrast to intratracheal antibody, intravenous anti-TNF antibody did not reduce neutrophil infiltration, suggesting that the role of TNF signaling is localized within the alveolar space and does not require decompartmentalization of TNF into the circulation. These findings provide the first direct evidence that pulmonary inflammation induced by high-stretch ventilation without underlying lung injury possesses a significant TNF-dependent component. The results suggest a potential for regional anti-TNF treatment in attenuating stretch-induced pulmonary inflammation.tumor necrosis factor receptor knockout mice; anti-tumor necrosis factor antibody; chemokine; ventilator-induced lung injury ALTHOUGH MECHANICAL VENTILATION is an indispensable tool in the treatment of critically ill patients, high stretch/high tidal volume ventilation has been demonstrated to result in lung damage (16,41). Clinically, ventilation of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) patients with high tidal volumes is associated with increased mortality (1, 3). The pathophysiology of ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) is still unclear, but animal models have demonstrated development of pulmonary inflammation in response to excessive lung stretch, resulting in recruitment of neutrophils and tissue damage (27,28,36,49). High-stretch ventilation promotes the release of various inflammatory mediators into the alveolar space (26,36,47,55), although the roles and relative involvement of these are not well understood. CXC chemokines h...
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) play an important role in ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI), but the mechanisms of pulmonary PMN recruitment, particularly early intravascular PMN sequestration during VILI, have not been elucidated. We investigated the physiological and molecular mechanisms of pulmonary PMN sequestration in an in vivo mouse model of VILI. Anesthetized C57/BL6 mice were ventilated for 1 h with high tidal volume (injurious ventilation), low tidal volume and high positive end-expiratory pressure (protective ventilation), or normal tidal volume (control ventilation). Pulmonary PMN sequestration analyzed by flow cytometry of lung cell suspensions was substantially enhanced in injurious ventilation compared with protective and control ventilation, preceding development of physiological signs of lung injury. Anesthetized, spontaneously breathing mice with continuous positive airway pressure demonstrated that raised alveolar pressure alone does not induce PMN entrapment. In vitro leukocyte deformability assay indicated stiffening of circulating leukocytes in injurious ventilation compared with control ventilation. PMN sequestration in injurious ventilation was markedly inhibited by administration of anti-L-selectin antibody, but not by anti-CD18 antibody. These results suggest that mechanical ventilatory stress initiates pulmonary PMN sequestration early in the course of VILI, and this phenomenon is associated with stretch-induced inflammatory events leading to PMN stiffening and mediated by L-selectin-dependent but CD18-independent mechanisms.
Ventilator-induced lung injury plays a crucial role in the outcome of patients with acute lung injury. Previous studies have shown a role for the cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) in stretch-induced alveolar neutrophil recruitment, but the involvement of TNF in stretch-induced pulmonary edema is unclear. We investigated the effects of TNF through its individual p55 and p75 receptors on early pulmonary edema formation during high stretch ventilation, before neutrophil infiltration. Anesthetized wild-type or TNF receptor single/double knockout mice were ventilated with high tidal volume ( approximately 38 ml/kg) for 2 h or until they developed arterial hypotension. Pulmonary edema was assessed by physiological parameters including respiratory mechanics and blood gases, and by lavage fluid protein, lung wet:dry weight ratio, and lung permeability measurements using fluorescence-labeled albumin. High stretch ventilation in wild-type and TNF receptor double knockout animals induced similar pulmonary edema, and only 25-30% of mice completed the protocol. In contrast, the p55 receptor knockout mice were strongly protected from edema formation, with all animals completing the protocol. Myeloperoxidase assay indicated that this protective effect was not associated with decreased pulmonary neutrophil sequestration. The p75 receptor knockout mice, however, displayed increased susceptibility to edema formation, and no animals survived the full 2 h. These results demonstrate a novel role for TNF signaling (independent from its effects on neutrophil recruitment) specifically through the p55 receptor, in promoting high stretch-induced pulmonary edema, whereas p75 signaling may play an opposing role.
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