Abstract

To ascertain the cause of pleural fibrosis in lung allografts, pleural changes were investigated in rat syngeneic and allogeneic lung grafts. The pleura of lung syngeneic grafts showed no pathological changes except for mild edema on the first day after transplantation. In lung allografts, recipient cells migrated into the subpleural tissue early after transplantation (latent phase). In the vascuar phase, recipient lymphocytes in the subpleural tissue increased in number, while almost all alveolar structures were free from infiltration. Both CD4-positive and CD8-positive cells infiltrated in almost equal numbers with macrophages. The subsets of infiltrating cells were similar to those of the perivascular and peribronchial areas. In the late vascular or alveolar phase, fibroblasts were observed among the infiltrating cells, and fibrotic changes started. In the destructive phase, collagen formation with marked pleural thickening was dominant. Pulmonary acute rejection should be treated at least up to the late vascular phase to prevent pleural fibrosis.

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