Abstract

BackgroundAcute lung injury (ALI) is associated with high mortality due to the lack of effective therapeutic strategies. Mechanical ventilation itself can cause ventilator-induced lung injury. Pulmonary vascular barrier function, regulated in part by Src kinase-dependent phosphorylation of caveolin-1 and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), plays a crucial role in the development of protein-/neutrophil-rich pulmonary edema, the hallmark of ALI. Amide-linked local anesthetics, such as ropivacaine, have anti-inflammatory properties in experimental ALI. We hypothesized ropivacaine may attenuate inflammation in a “double-hit” model of ALI triggered by bacterial endotoxin plus hyperinflation via inhibition of Src-dependent signaling.MethodsC57BL/6 (WT) and ICAM-1 −/− mice were exposed to either nebulized normal saline (NS) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 10 mg) for 1 hour. An intravenous bolus of 0.33 mg/kg ropivacaine or vehicle was followed by mechanical ventilation with normal (7 ml/kg, NTV) or high tidal volume (28 ml/kg, HTV) for 2 hours. Measures of ALI (excess lung water (ELW), extravascular plasma equivalents, permeability index, myeloperoxidase activity) were assessed and lungs were homogenized for Western blot analysis of phosphorylated and total Src, ICAM-1 and caveolin-1. Additional experiments evaluated effects of ropivacaine on LPS-induced phosphorylation/expression of Src, ICAM-1 and caveolin-1 in human lung microvascular endothelial cells (HLMVEC).ResultsWT mice treated with LPS alone showed a 49% increase in ELW compared to control animals (p = 0.001), which was attenuated by ropivacaine (p = 0.001). HTV ventilation alone increased measures of ALI even more than LPS, an effect which was not altered by ropivacaine. LPS plus hyperinflation (“double-hit”) increased all ALI parameters (ELW, EVPE, permeability index, MPO activity) by 3–4 fold compared to control, which were again decreased by ropivacaine. Western blot analyses of lung homogenates as well as HLMVEC treated in culture with LPS alone showed a reduction in Src activation/expression, as well as ICAM-1 expression and caveolin-1 phosphorylation. In ICAM-1 −/− mice, neither addition of LPS to HTV ventilation alone nor ropivacaine had an effect on the development of ALI.ConclusionsRopivacaine may be a promising therapeutic agent for treating the cause of pulmonary edema by blocking inflammatory Src signaling, ICAM-1 expression, leukocyte infiltration, and vascular hyperpermeability.

Highlights

  • Acute lung injury (ALI) is associated with high mortality due to the lack of effective therapeutic strategies

  • Animal protocol To evaluate the effects of ropivacaine on acute lung injury as induced by high tidal volume ventilation or endotoxin, as well as by the “double-hit” with endotoxin and VILI, mice were exposed to either nebulized normal saline (NS, 0.9% sodium chloride solution, Hospira, Lake Forest, IL) or 10 mg nebulized Escherichia coli serotype 055:B5 lipopolysaccharide diluted in NS

  • Ropivacaine attenuates measures of ALI triggered by bacterial endotoxin and hyperinflation To assess the influence of ropivacaine administration on the degree of ALI induced by endotoxin or high tidal volume (HTV) alone vs the “double-hit” model, we measured ELW, EVPE and permeability index

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Summary

Introduction

Acute lung injury (ALI) is associated with high mortality due to the lack of effective therapeutic strategies. Amide-linked local anesthetics, such as ropivacaine, have anti-inflammatory properties in experimental ALI. Additional experiments evaluated effects of ropivacaine on LPS-induced phosphorylation/expression of Src, ICAM-1 and caveolin-1 in human lung microvascular endothelial cells (HLMVEC). Local anesthetics are widely used in clinical practice for local, regional and neuraxial anesthesia, as well as for peri- and postoperative pain control [7,8] They have been demonstrated to exhibit significant anti-inflammatory properties [9,10,11]. In an earlier study of bacterial endotoxin-induced lung injury, it was shown that administration of the long-acting amide-linked local anesthetic ropivacaine attenuated endothelial cell NFκB activation and inflammatory lung injury in vivo and lung epithelial cell activation in vitro [9]

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