Abstract
BackgroundThe objective was to define murine histologic alterations resembling asthma in a BALB/c OVA model and to suggest grading criteria. Identified were six salient histologic findings in lungs with putative allergic inflammation: 1) bronchoarterial space inflammation; 2) peri-venular inflammation; 3) inflammation about amuscular blood vessels; 4) inter-alveolar space inflammation, not about capillaries; 5) pleural inflammation; and 6) eosinophils within the inflammatory aggregates. An initial study comprised six groups of twelve mice each: 1) stressed, control; 2) stressed, sensitized; 3) stressed, challenged; 4) not physically stressed, control; 5) not physically stressed, sensitized; 6) not physically stressed, challenged. A second study comprised four experimental groups of twenty mice each: 1) stressed, control; 2) stressed, challenged; 3) not physically stressed, control; 4) not physically stressed, challenged. A third study evaluated two grading criteria, 1) the proportion of non-tracheal respiratory passages with inflammatory aggregates and 2) mitoses in the largest two non-tracheal respiratory passages, in five groups of five mice each, evaluated at different times after the last exposure.ResultsThe first study suggested the six histological findings might reliably indicate the presence of alterations resembling asthma: whereas 82.4% of mice with a complete response had detectable interleukin (IL)-5, only 3.8% of mice without one did; whereas 77.8% of mice with a complete response were challenged mice, only 6.7% of mice without complete responses were. The second study revealed that the six histological findings provided a definition that was 97.4% sensitive and 100% specific. The third study found that the odds of a bronchial passage's having inflammation declined 1) when mitoses were present (OR = 0.73, 0.60 - 0.90), and 2) with one day increased time (OR = 0.75, 0.65 - 0.86).ConclusionA definition of murine histologic alterations resembling asthma in the BALB/c OVA mouse was developed and validated. The definition will be of use in experiments involving this model to ensure that all mice said to have undergone an asthmatic attack did indeed reveal allergic pulmonary inflammation. Proposed grading criteria should be further evaluated with additional studies using physiologic measures of attack severity and increased airway resistance.
Highlights
The objective was to define murine histologic alterations resembling asthma in a BALB/c OVA model and to suggest grading criteria
Definition of murine histologic alterations resembling asthma Based on evaluation of prior literature [6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26] and detailed examination of associated photomicrographs, six histological features were deemed most important and most reliably assessed: 1) inflammation of bronchoarterial spaces; 2) perivenular inflammation; 3) inflammation about amuscular blood vessels; 4) inflammation in interalveolar spaces, not surrounding capillaries; 5) pleural inflammation; and 6) eosinophils within the inflammatory aggregates
The presence of all six findings indicated that inflammatory infiltrates were distributed throughout the lung; further subclassification of location was impossible for routine assessments because, for any particular section, the size of the respiratory passages and pulmonary veins and their location with respect to the trachea and pleura depend upon the precise location of the section within the lung and the orientation of the lung at the time histological sections are created, matters that cannot be controlled without great difficulty
Summary
The objective was to define murine histologic alterations resembling asthma in a BALB/c OVA model and to suggest grading criteria. A general understanding of the histological findings of the BALB/c OVA mouse has been generated by the publication of different studies [3], a systematic approach to the most important aberrations to garner a readily identifiable histological definition has not been performed Such a definition would be of utility as a safeguard when performing studies using the BALB/c OVA mouse because it would ensure that all individual animals submitted for study experienced histologic changes resembling asthma. A third study evaluated two grading criteria, 1) the proportion of non-tracheal respiratory passages with inflammatory aggregates and 2) the presence or absence of mitoses in the largest two non-tracheal respiratory passages, in five experimental groups of five mice each, assigned to different times after the last exposure
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