Effect of cardiogenic and noncardiogenic pulmonary edema on histamine responsiveness in sheep

Author:

Snapper James R.1,Lefferts Peter L.1,Lu Weixuan2,Hwang Young Sil3,Plitman Jonathan D.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-2650;

2. Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100730, China; and

3. Gyeongsang University College of Medicine, Chinju 660-280, Korea

Abstract

We compared the effects of cardiogenic pulmonary edema, brief pulmonary vascular congestion without frank edema, and noncardiogenic pulmonary edema on responsiveness to inhaled histamine in chronically instrumented awake sheep. Histamine responsiveness was measured before and after 1) cardiogenic pulmonary edema induced by raising left atrial pressure to 35 cmH2O (↑Pla) for 3.5 h by partial obstruction of flow across the mitral valve, 2) brief cardiogenic congestion via ↑Pla for 0.5 h, 3) noncardiogenic pulmonary edema induced by 25 mg/kg intravenous perilla ketone (PK), and 4) 3.5 h of monitoring without ↑Pla or PK (controls). Treatment for 3.5 h with ↑Pla ( n = 9) and PK ( n = 11) each significantly lessened the histamine dose required to cause a fall to 65% of baseline dynamic lung compliance (ED65Cdyn), i.e., increased responsiveness. Sheep treated for 0.5 h with ↑Pla ( n = 7) and controls ( n = 5) showed no significant change in ED65Cdyn. Intravenous atropine (0.1 mg/kg) before the second histamine challenge altered neither the reduction of ED65Cdyn in ↑Pla ( n = 8) and PK ( n = 9) sheep nor the ED65Cdyn level of controls ( n = 9). These data imply that the local effects of edema, rather than bronchial vascular hemodynamics, cholinergic reflexes, and permeability changes, are germane to lung hyperresponsiveness during pulmonary edema in sheep.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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