Abstract

We examined the effect of the ventilatory rate and the temperature of excised lungs and of increased body temperature of anesthetized spontaneously breathing rats on the centrifugal sedimentation of disaturated phosphatidylcholine (DSPC) present in lung lavage returns. More DSPC sedimented from lungs ventilated at low than at high rates, and sedimentation of DSPC and lung volume loss were temperature dependent, 41 greater than 37 greater than 4 degrees C. Most of the noncellular sedimented material was tubular and common myelin; these had diminished ability to lower surface tension rapidly compared with less-aggregated surfactant. More aggregated DSPC accumulated and lung volume decreased more in spontaneously breathing rats anesthetized for 30 min than in rats killed immediately after being anesthetized; these changes were greater after 30 min of anesthesia in hyperthermic rats (40.4 +/- 0.3 degrees C) than in normothermic rats (37.4 +/- 0.1 degrees C). These studies have shown a correlation between the increased accumulation of surfactant as large aggregates and the loss of alveolar stability; however, a cause and effect between these events has not yet been shown.

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