Abstract

Many infants recovering from acute lung disease and pulmonary hypertension still have evidence of reactive airways disease at one year of age, suggesting longer-term airway effects. We hypothesized that parallel changes in smooth muscle would occur in airways and pulmonary arteries from animals with pulmonary hypertension and during normoxic recovery. Thus, two-hour-old piglets were subjected to 3 d chronic hypobaric hypoxia and 3-d-old piglets were subjected to 11 d hypoxia. Some animals were allowed to recover in room air for 3 or 6 d. The amount of smooth muscle and responses of isolated paired bronchial and pulmonary artery rings to endothelin-1 (ET-1) and norepinephrine were studied at the end of hypoxic exposure, on recovery and in age-matched control animals. In all hypoxia induced pulmonary hypertensive animals, smooth muscle area and ET-1 contractile response was increased in the pulmonary arteries and bronchi. Norepinephrine-induced relaxant response was impaired significantly in both bronchi and pulmonary arteries. After 3 d recovery, pulmonary arterial smooth muscle area decreased by 65%, and ET-1-induced contractile responses were normal for age. In the airways, ET-1 contractile response only normalized after six days and bronchial smooth muscle was still increased. After 6 d recovery pulmonary arterial norepinephrine-induced relaxant response had returned to normal, but bronchial response remained impaired. Thus during pulmonary hypertension, both bronchial and pulmonary arterial smooth muscle area and contractile responses are increased. On recovery, regression of bronchial structural and functional abnormalities is slower than in pulmonary arteries.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call