A method for translational rat ex vivo lung perfusion experimentation

Author:

Ohsumi Akihiro12ORCID,Kanou Takashi1,Ali Aadil1,Guan Zehong1,Hwang David M.1,Waddell Thomas K.1,Juvet Stephen1,Liu Mingyao1,Keshavjee Shaf1,Cypel Marcelo1

Affiliation:

1. Latner Thoracic Surgery Research Laboratories, Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

2. Department of Thoracic Surgery, Kyoto University Hospital, Kyoto, Japan

Abstract

The application of ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) has significantly increased the successful clinical use of marginal donor lungs. While large animal EVLP models exist to test new strategies to improve organ repair, there is currently no rat EVLP model capable of maintaining long-term lung viability. Here, we describe a new rat EVLP model that addresses this need, while enabling the study of lung injury due to cold ischemic time (CIT). The technique involves perfusing and ventilating male Lewis rat donor lungs for 4 h before transplanting the left lung into a recipient rat and then evaluating lung function 2 h after reperfusion. To test injury within this model, lungs were divided into groups and exposed to different CITs (i.e., 20 min, 6 h, 12 h, 18 h and 24 h). Experiments involving the 24-h-CIT group were prematurely terminated due to the development of severe edema. For the other groups, no differences in the ratio of arterial oxygen partial pressure to fractional inspired oxygen ([Formula: see text]/[Formula: see text]) were observed during EVLP; however, lung compliance decreased over time in the 18-h group ( P = 0.012) and the [Formula: see text]/[Formula: see text] of the blood from the left pulmonary vein 2 h after transplantation was lower compared with 20-min-CIT group ( P = 0.0062). This new model maintained stable lung function during 4-h EVLP and after transplantation when exposed to up to 12 h of CIT.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Physiology

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