Abstract
AbstractMortality rates among patients suffering from acute respiratory failure remain perplexingly high despite maintenance of blood homeostasis. The biotrauma hypothesis advances that mechanical forces from invasive ventilation trigger immunological factors that spread systemically. Yet, how these forces elicit an immune response remains unclear. Here we show that flow-induced stresses under mechanical ventilation can injure the bronchial epithelium of ventilated in vitro upper airway models and directly modulate inflammatory cytokine secretion associated with pulmonary injury. We identify site-specific susceptibility to epithelial erosion in airways from jet-flow impaction and measure an increase in cell apoptosis and modulated secretions of cytokines IL-6, 8 and 10. We find that prophylactic pharmacological treatment with anti-inflammatory therapeutics reduces apoptosis and pro-inflammatory signaling during ventilation. Our 3D in vitro airway platform points to a previously overlooked origin of lung injury and showcases translational opportunities in preclinical pulmonary research towards protective therapies and improved protocols for patient care.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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