Abstract

Leukotrienes, when administered into the pulmonary circulation of intact animals or isolated perfused lungs, have been associated with the formation of pulmonary edema. In addition, leukotrienes were identified in edema fluid and in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) both from patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and from dogs with ethchlorvynol-induced acute lung injury (ALI). To determine whether the identification of leukotrienes in BALF was a finding common to ALI, etiology notwithstanding, we produced acute lung injury in dogs with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). PMA produces a model of ALI thought to differ mechanistically from ethchlorvynol-induced ALI. Leukotriene C 4 (LTC 4), D 4 (LTD 4) and B 4 (LTB 4) were measured in BALF before and after PMA administration in intact pentobarbital-anesthetized dogs. The intravenous administration of 20 or 30 μg/kg of PMA produced increases in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) and extravascular lung water (EVLW), whereas, 10 or 15 μg/kg caused only a modest increased in BALF solely in those animals that developed increases in EVLW. These results, when viewed together with those reported in humans with ARDS and in dogs with ethchlorvynol-induced ALI, support the hypothesis that leukotriene detection in BALF is feature common to ALI, etiology notwithstanding.

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