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Copyright © 2007, American Thoracic Society Airway Hyperresponsiveness in Allergically Inflamed Mice The Role of Airway Closure 1Vermont Lung Center, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Lennart K.A. Lundblad, Ph.D., The University of Vermont College of Medicine, HSRF 230, 149 Beaumont Avenue, Burlington, VT 05405-0075. E-mail: lennart.lundblad/at/uvm.edu Received October 3, 2006; Accepted January 25, 2007. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Rationale: Allergically inflamed mice exhibit airway hyperresponsiveness to inhaled methacholine, which computer simulations of lung impedance suggest is due to enhanced lung derecruitment and which we sought to verify in the present study. Methods: BALB/c mice were sensitized and challenged with ovalbumin to induce allergic inflammation; the control mice were sensitized but received no challenge. The mice were then challenged with inhaled methacholine and respiratory system impedance tracked for the following 10 minutes. Respiratory elastance (H) was estimated from each impedance measurement. One group of mice was ventilated with 100% O2 during this procedure and another group was ventilated with air. After the procedure, the mice were killed and ventilated with pure N2, after which the trachea was tied off and the lungs were imaged with micro-computed tomography (micro-CT). Results: H was significantly higher in allergic mice than in control animals after methacholine challenge. The ratio of H at the end of the measurement period between allergic and nonallergic mice ventilated with O2 was 1.36, indicating substantial derecruitment in the allergic animals. The ratio between lung volumes determined by micro-CT in the control and the allergic mice was also 1.36, indicative of a corresponding volume loss due to absorption atelectasis. Micro-CT images and histograms of Hounsfield units from the lungs also showed increased volume loss in the allergic mice compared with control animals after methacholine challenge. Conclusions: These results support the conclusion that airway closure is a major component of hyperresponsiveness in allergically inflamed mice. Keywords: asthma, micro-computed tomography, input impedance, lung derecruitment, lung volume
The goal of the present study was to obtain experimental verification of the role of small airway closure in the allergically inflamed BALB/c mouse. Our approach was to exploit the phenomenon of absorption atelectasis. Specifically, we hypothesized that if derecruitment of lung units occurs during bronchoconstriction via closure of small airways, then prior ventilation of the lung with pure oxygen should lead to post-challenge collapse of the derecruited units due to absorption of the trapped oxygen by the capillary blood. In the present study, we used micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) to quantify the degree of absorption atelectasis induced by bronchial challenge in allergically inflamed versus control BALB/c mice ventilated with both air and pure oxygen. Some of the results of these studies have been previously reported in the form of an abstract (6). METHODS The techniques and methods outlined below are described in greater detail in the online supplement. Animal Preparation Female BALB/c mice, 6 to 8 weeks old, were sensitized on Days 0 and 14 with intraperitoneal injections of ovalbumin (Ova) and then exposed to inhalational challenges with Ova or control saline as previously described (Days 21, 22, and 23) (7). On Day 25, the mice were anesthetized and connected to a small animal ventilator (FlexiVent; SCIREQ Scientific Respiratory Equipment, Inc., Montreal, PQ, Canada) and paralyzed with pancuronium as previously described (8). The depth of anesthesia was monitored by electrocardiogram (ECG). Experimental Groups We studied four groups of mice (n = 5/group). The first group was challenged with inhaled Ova and ventilated with 100% O2 (Inflamed-O2). The second group was exposed to control saline inhalation and ventilated with 100% O2 (Control-O2). The third group was similar to the Inflamed-O2 group but was ventilated with room air (Inflamed-Air). The fourth group was similar to the Control-O2 group but was ventilated with room air (Control-Air). The theory of absorption atelectasis is explained in Figure E1 in the online supplement. Experimental Protocol After 1 minute of regular ventilation at a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of 3 cm H2O, a standard lung volume history was established by delivering two deep sighs to a pressure limit of 25 cm H2O. Next, two baseline measurements of respiratory system input impedance (Zrs) were obtained. This was followed by an inhalation of either aerosolized methacholine (12.5 mg/ml) or control saline for 40 seconds, achieved by directing the inspiratory flow from the ventilator through the aerosolization chamber of an ultrasonic nebulizer. Zrs was then measured every 10 seconds for 3 minutes, and thereafter every minute for 7 minutes. At the end of the experiment, the mouse was given an overdose of sodium pentobarbital and immediately ventilated with 100% N2 for approximately 3 minutes. When death had been confirmed by ECG, the trachea was tied off after exhalation against a PEEP of 3 cm H2O and the cannula was removed. We then waited 45 to 60 minutes for the mouse to stiffen to prevent motion artifacts during subsequent imaging by micro-CT. The lungs were then removed and scored histologically for degree of inflammation. Determination of Input Impedance Measurements of Zrs were fit with the constant-phase model of impedance (9). One of the parameters of this model, H, provides a measure of the elastance of the respiratory system, RN measures the resistance of the conducting airways, and G represents tissue resistance. Micro-CT Lung volume (Vtg) was calculated by defining a region of interest encapsulating the entire lung within the three-dimensional micro-CT image of the mouse (Figure 1
Statistics Data are presented as means ± SEM. H data were compared using two-way analysis of variance. HUmax values and Vtg were compared between the two groups of mice using Student's t test. Wilcoxon's rank sum test was used to compare histologic scores. Origin 7.5 (OriginLab Corp, Northampton, MA) and Minitab (Minitab, Inc., State College, PA) were used for the analysis, and statistical significance was taken at p < 0.05. RESULTS Figure 2A
Figure 3
Figure 5A
Figure 6A
The inflammatory status of the animals was confirmed within the control and inflamed groups by histologic scoring of lung slices stained with hematoxylin–eosin. The mean scores were Control-Air 1.08 (± 0.35) versus Control-O2 1.00 (± 0.32) (not significant), and Inflamed-Air 2.00 (± 0.18) versus Inflamed-O2 2.28 (± 0.17) (not significant). The Inflamed animals received significantly higher scores than the Control animals (p < 0.01). DISCUSSION We performed the present study to test our hypothesis that the exaggerated response to inhaled methacholine in allergic mice can be explained by accentuated airway closure (1). To achieve this goal, we took advantage of the phenomenon of absorption atelectasis, which occurs when O2 is trapped behind a closed airway and becomes absorbed by the pulmonary capillary blood, resulting in collapse of the subtended lung region. The gas in the remaining lung can then be visualized by micro-CT and quantified to provide a measure of the volume of open lung. In support of this notion, the images we obtained post-bronchoconstriction in Inflamed-O2 mice clearly show large regions of the lungs to be devoid of gas. In particular, the basal regions of the images in Figures 3F–3J Airway closure during bronchoconstriction in our mice was not, however, an entirely random event. The micro-CT MIP images in Figure 3 The results of the present study are thus consistent with the conclusions of our previous study (1) that AHR in allergically inflamed mice results from a physically thickened mucosa. For purely geometric reasons, this allows for excessive narrowing of the airway lumen, with some airways proceeding to full closure even when the degree of airway smooth muscle shortening is normal. Closure is also likely exacerbated in allergic inflammation by disruption of surfactant function, possibly due to fibrin deposition (13), which would increase the propensity for liquid bridges to form across the lumen of small airways (14). The supportive evidence arising from the present study is based on the supposition that the O2 we delivered to the lungs of the mice acted only in the manner we intended. That is, we assumed that the only effect of the O2 was to be passively absorbed by the pulmonary capillary blood, causing collapse of lung regions isolated behind points of airway closure. We cannot discount the possibility, however, that the rapid absorption of O2 may have affected the pattern of airway closure in some way, perhaps by quickly closing some airways which might then have hindered the closure of other nearby airways via the forces of airway–parenchymal intercependence. Also, we must bear in mind that pure O2 is biologically active and has been associated with damaging effects in the lung. For example, hyperoxia over an extended period of time has been shown to cause inflammatory changes and to possibly increase airway smooth muscle force in vitro in newborn rats (15). On the other hand, H has been shown not to change in mice over 24 hours of hyperoxia (16), and short-term hyperoxia does not seem to affect the bronchial response to methacholine in humans (17, 18). This would seem to suggest that there were no significant biological effects arising from the short time (~ 10 min) that the animals in the present study were exposed to hyperoxia. Nevertheless, pure O2 did exert a curious and unexpected influence on our results. Figures 5A Our finding of the preeminent role of airway closure as one mechanism for AHR in allergic mice raises the question of how relevant airway closure is to the AHR of human asthma. In fact, there is substantial evidence to support the importance of closure in humans. Positron emission tomography has revealed that bronchoconstricted patients with asthma have large ventilation defects in their lungs that, in some cases, receive less than 0.5% of the mean lung ventilation (24). Single-photon emission CT with inhaled Technegas has shown that, even though airway closure appears to be a normal feature in a healthy lung, the pattern by which closure occurs is altered in subjects with asthma (11). It has also recently been shown that humans with asthma challenged with methacholine have clusters of underventilated alveoli adjacent to normally ventilated areas, and that this pattern can be understood in terms of self-organized clusters of small airway closures (10). Similarly, a correlation has been reported between the amount of air trapped in the lungs and the reversibility of small airway constriction (25), again suggesting that it is the small airways that close during bronchoconstriction in human lungs. Thus, there is strong evidence to suggest that enhanced airway closure is a significant feature of the allergically inflamed lung in mice and humans alike. From a therapeutic point of view, the potential for pure O2 to lead to absorption atelectasis suggests that O2 administration to individuals in status asthmaticus, a common practice in the emergency room, might worsen existing lung collapse. On the other hand, patients presenting in acute distress have presumably already experienced their major bronchoconstrictive episode so, provided further bronchospasm and airway closure is not forthcoming, filling the accessible portions of the lung with O2 may not be problematic. We must consider the methodologic limitations of our study. One key point is that the impedance parameter H gives a functional measure of the stiffness of the lung, yet we used it to infer the extent of lung derecruitment. This is only valid if the intrinsic mechanical properties of the tissues do not change significantly with the interventions we applied. We cannot rule this out, particularly because the tissue distortion induced by narrowing of airways has been shown in other species to cause a change in intrinsic tissue stiffness (26, 27). On the other hand, these effects appear to be minimal in the rat (28). The lack of bronchial circulation in mice and rats may explain why intrinsic tissue stiffness after intravenous methacholine does not increase in these species but does increase in dogs. Another important point is that micro-CT images can only show the presence or absence of gas within a given lung region, so we cannot discriminate between alveolar flooding and atelectasis on the basis of the micro-CT images alone. However, alveolar flooding should not lead to absorption atelectasis after O2 ventilation because there would be no open alveolar space for O2 to collect for subsequent absorption by the capillary blood, yet Figures 5 We also assumed that we could obtain an accurate measure of Vtg by integrating the air in the voxels within the lung fields of the micro-CT images. We have previously shown that lung volumes obtained with an independent plethysmographic technique in vivo correlate well with Vtg obtained by micro-CT (29). Nevertheless, a fundamental requirement for CT imaging of any kind is that the subject remains still throughout the scan, which in our study took about 80 minutes. We achieved this by killing the animals and then waiting for 45 to 60 minutes for them to stiffen before being placed in the micro-CT scanner. This introduced a substantial time delay between the in vivo assessment of H and the post mortem measurement of Vtg. We attempted to prevent changes taking place in Vtg between these two measurements by filling the lungs with an inert gas, N2, to prevent further absorption of gas by any blood remaining in the lungs after death. Even so, we cannot be sure that Vtg at the time of H measurement was the same as that when it was measured by micro-CT, even though our results make this look like a reasonable assumption. In summary, we used micro-CT and the phenomenon of absorption atelectasis to produce visible evidence of airway closure after bronchoconstriction in mice. In allergically inflamed mice, the amount of lung derecruited through airway closure corresponded closely to the elevation in lung stiffness measured using the forced oscillation technique. These findings provide independent support for the hypothesis that AHR in allergically inflamed BALB/c mice reflects an accentuated degree of closure of small airways. Finally, an interesting corollary of these find- ings is that they cause us to question our use of the term AHR itself. For many, AHR implies an abnormality in the active response of the airways. Our results show, however, that if we want AHR to mean an abnormal response in lung function to bronchial challenge in general, we will have to broaden its range of applicability to include alterations related to virtually any alteration in the biophysical properties of the lung. [Online Supplement]
Notes Supported by NIH grants R01 HL67273 and NCRR-COBRE P20 RR15557. This article has an online supplement, which is accessible from this issue's table of contents at www.atsjournals.org Originally Published in Press as DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200610-1410OC on January 25, 2007 Conflict of Interest Statement: None of the authors has a financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of this manuscript. References 1. Wagers S, Lundblad LKA, Ekman M, Irvin CG, Bates JHT. The allergic mouse model of asthma: normal smooth muscle in an abnormal lung? J Appl Physiol 2004;96:2019–2027. [PubMed] 2. Pare PD. Airway hyperresponsiveness in asthma: geometry is not everything! Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2003;168:913–914. [PubMed] 3. Fredberg JJ. Bronchospasm and its biophysical basis in airway smooth muscle. Respir Res 2004;5:2. [PubMed] 4. Brusasco V, Pellegrino R. 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