The effects of bronchopulmonary lavage with isotonic NaCl have been investigated in the hamster, and methods are described for separating pulmonary surfactant from cells in lavage fluid and for the quantitative isolation of surfactant from lung. It has been shown that hamsters almost invariably surv
The reversible detachment and deposition of surfactant and of pulmonary macrophages during bronchopulmonary lavage in the rat
β Scribed by P. J. R. Phizackerley; G. E. Newman; H. Smith; J. R. Cooper
- Book ID
- 104505295
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 400 KB
- Volume
- 140
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3417
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
A procedure is described for carrying out repetitive bronchopulmonary lavage in the rat, in which a given volume of iavage fluid is introduced into the lungs from a reservoir and then withdrawn from the lungs back into the reservoir, the process being repeated a number of times. During this procedure there is a nett release of endogenous surfactant and macrophages from the lungs. [^14^C] pulmonary surfactant was prepared from rats previously injected intravenously with [1β^14^C] palmitate, and pulmonary macrophages labelled with ^85^Sr were prepared from rats which had received by intratracheal injection a suspension of fused clay particles labelled with ^85^Sr. It was shown by carrying out repetitive bronchopulmonary lavage with 0.15MβNaCl containing either exogenous [^14^C]βsurfactant or [^85^Sr]βmacrophages that the release of endogenous surfactant and macrophages from the lung into the lavage fluid occurred concomitantly with the retention within the lung of radioactive exogenous surfactant and macrophages from the lavage fluid. It is concluded that the process of surfactant and macrophage detachment during bronchopulmonary lavage is reversible and that the exchange processes are of substantial magnitude.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Mammalian lungs secrete a mixture of surface-active lipids (surfactant), which greatly reduces the surface tension of the fluid coating the inner lung surface, thereby reducing the risk of collapse upon deflation and increasing compliance upon inflation. During foetal lung maturation, these lipids b