Author:
Dodd-o Jeffrey M.,Hristopoulos Maria,Scharfstein Daniel,Brower Roy,Hassoun Paul,King Landon S.,Becker Patrice,Liu Manchang,Wang Weiwei,Hassoun Heitham T.,Rabb Hamid
Abstract
We hypothesized that the influence of acute kidney injury (AKI) on the sensitivity of the lung to an injurious process varies with the severity of the injurious process. Thus, we thought that AKI would exacerbate lung injury from low degrees of lung trauma but attenuate lung injury from higher degrees of lung trauma. C57BL/6 mice underwent AKI (30-min kidney ischemia) or sham surgery, followed at 24 h by 4 h of spontaneous breathing (SB), mechanical ventilation with low tidal volume (7 ml/kg, LTV), or mechanical ventilation with high tidal volume (30 ml/kg, HTV). Compared with LTV, median bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) protein leak was significantly lower with SB and greater with HTV in both sham and AKI mice. Compared with LTV, median Evans blue dye-labeled albumin extravasation in lungs (L-EBD) was also significantly lower with SB and greater with HTV. L-EBD showed a significant interaction between ventilatory mode and kidney health, such that AKI attenuated the L-EBD rise seen in HTV vs. LTV sham mice. An interaction between ventilatory mode and kidney health could also be seen in BAL neutrophil number (PMN). Thus, AKI attenuated the BAL PMN rise seen in HTV vs. LTV sham mice. These data support the presence of a complex interaction between mechanical ventilation and AKI in which the sensitivity of the lung to trauma varies with the magnitude of the trauma and may involve a modification of pulmonary neutrophil activity by AKI.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
26 articles.
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