ABSTRACT
Background An excessive pulmonary inflammatory response could explain the poor prognosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients submitted to invasive mechanical ventilation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the response to normal tidal volume (Vt) mechanical ventilation in a murine model of pulmonary emphysema, which represents the alveolar component of COPD. In this model, two time points associated with different levels of lung inflammation but similar lung destruction, were analyzed.
Methods C57BL/6 mice received a tracheal instillation of 5 IU of porcine pancreatic elastase (Elastase mice) or the same volume of saline (Saline mice). Fourteen (D14) and 21 (D21) days after instillation, mice were anesthetized, intubated, and either mechanically ventilated (MV) with a normal Vt (8 mL/kg) or maintained on spontaneous ventilation (SV) during two hours. We analyzed respiratory mechanics, emphysema degree (mean chord length by lung histological analysis), and lung inflammation (bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cellularity, proportion and activation of total lung inflammatory cells by flow cytometry).
Results As compared with Saline mice, Elastase mice showed a similarly increased mean chord length and pulmonary compliance at D14 and D21, while BAL cellularity was comparable between groups. Lung mechanics was similarly altered during mechanical ventilation in Elastase and Saline mice. Activated alveolar macrophages CD11bmid were present in lung parenchyma in both Elastase SV mice and Elastase MV mice at D14 but were absent at D21 and in Saline mice, indicating an inflammatory state with elastase at D14 only. At D14, Elastase MV mice showed a significant increase in percentage of neutrophils concomitant with a decrease in percentage of alveolar macrophages in total lung, as compared with Elastase SV mice. Furthermore, alveolar macrophages of Elastase MV mice at D14 overexpressed Gr1, and monocytes showed a trend to overexpression of CD62L, compared with Elastase SV mice.
Conclusions In an elastase-induced model of pulmonary emphysema, normal Vt mechanical ventilation produced an increase in the proportion of pulmonary neutrophils, and an activation of alveolar macrophages and pulmonary monocytes. This response was observed only when the emphysema model showed an underlying inflammation (D14), reflected by the presence of activated alveolar macrophages CD11bmid.