Abstract

This study was performed to investigate the mechanism by which 99mTc-DTPA molecules pass through the pulmonary epithelium following inhalation of 99mTc-DTPA aerosol. Interstitial pneumonitis was induced in 6-week-old male rats by instilling 1 mg/kg of bleomycin into the trachea. Disappearance of radioactivity from the lungs was measured with a gamma camera every 2 weeks to estimate pulmonary epithelial permeability, and light- and electron-microscopic histopathologic examinations were performed at the same intervals. There was a statistically significant increase in the pulmonary epithelial permeability at 2 weeks after the instillation of bleomycin. However, subsequent changes in pulmonary epithelial permeability were not uniform; some animals showed recovery and some showed further increase and/or partial recovery. Microscopically, increase in the capillary bed, round cell infiltration, and widening of the interstitial space were observed in addition to the presence of macrophages in the alveolar spaces at 2 weeks. Electron microscopic examination revealed vacuolization, thinning and detachment of the alveolar epithelium, and denudation of the basement membrane. Prominent fibrosis, honeycombing, thinning of the pulmonary epithelium, and increase in collagen fibers were observed after 18 weeks. We consider that vacuolization, thinning, and detachment of the pulmonary epithelium and denudation of the basement membrane are related to the increase in pulmonary epithelial permeability in bleomycin-induced interstitial pneumonitis.

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