Abstract

In vivo instillation of Pasteurella haemolytica (greater than or equal to 10(7) colony-forming units/kg) into a lobar bronchus of sheep produced bacterial pneumonia by 7 days postinoculation. Infection was verified bacteriologically and histologically. Macromolecule secretion and ion and water fluxes were subsequently measured in tracheal tissues in vitro and were compared with values from sham-infected sheep. Macromolecules were radiolabeled with 35SO4 and [3H]threonine, and we measured the secretion of macromolecule-bound radiolabel onto the mucosa. Unidirectional fluxes of Cl-, Na+, and water were measured with radioactive tracers under open-circuit and short-circuit conditions. Lung infection increased basal secretion of bound 35SO4 (by 189%) and bound [3H]-threonine (by 110%). It significantly increased net Na+ absorption under open- and short-circuit conditions and induced open-circuit net absorption of Cl- and water (16 +/- 29 microliters X cm-2 X h-1). These changes were associated with specific recruitment of neutrophils and elevated levels of arachidonate metabolites (thromboxane B2 and leukotriene B4) in the airways. Thus the bacterial pneumonia-induced changes in tracheal mucus secretion may be the result of airway inflammation.

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