Impact of preservation solution on the extent of blood-air barrier damage and edema formation in experimental lung transplantation

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Christian Mühlfeld - , University of Bern (Author)
  • Katharina Müller - (Author)
  • Lars-Peder Pallesen - , Department of Neurology (Author)
  • Tim Sandhaus - (Author)
  • Navis Madershahian - (Author)
  • Joachim Richter - (Author)
  • Thorsten Wahlers - (Author)
  • Thorsten Wittwer - (Author)
  • Matthias Ochs - (Author)

Abstract

A major aim in lung transplantation is to prevent the loss of structural integrity due to ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) injury. Preservation solutions protect the lung against I/R injury to a variable extent. We compared the influence of two extracellular-type preservation solutions (Perfadex, or PX, and Celsior, or CE) on the morphological alterations induced by I/R. Pigs were randomly assigned to sham (n = 4), PX (n = 5), or CE (n = 2) group. After flush perfusion with PX or CE, donor lungs were excised and stored for 27 hr at 4 degrees C. The left donor lung was implanted into the recipient, reperfused for 6 hr, and, afterward, prepared for light and electron microscopy. Intra-alveolar, septal, and peribronchovascular edema as well as the integrity of the blood-air barrier were determined stereologically. Intra-alveolar edema was more pronounced in CE (219.80 +/- 207.55 ml) than in PX (31.46 +/- 15.75 ml). Peribronchovascular (sham: 13.20 +/- 4.99 ml; PX: 15.57 +/- 5.53 ml; CE: 31.56 +/- 5.78 ml) and septal edema (thickness of alveolar septal interstitium, sham: 98 +/- 33 nm; PX: 84 +/- 8 nm; CE: 249 +/- 85 nm) were only found in CE. The blood-air barrier was similarly well preserved in sham and PX but showed larger areas of swollen and fragmented epithelium or endothelium in CE. The present study shows that Perfadex effectively prevents intra-alveolar, septal, and peribronchovascular edema formation as well as injury of the blood-air barrier during I/R. Celsior was not effective in preserving the lung from morphological I/R injury.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)491-500
Number of pages10
Journal The anatomical record : AR ; advances in integrative anatomy and evolutionary biology ; an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists, AAA
Volume290
Issue number5
Publication statusPublished - May 2007
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 34249295544

Keywords

Keywords

  • Animals, Blood-Air Barrier/drug effects, Citrates/pharmacology, Disaccharides/pharmacology, Electrolytes/pharmacology, Glutamates/pharmacology, Glutathione/pharmacology, Histidine/pharmacology, Lung/blood supply, Lung Transplantation/methods, Mannitol/pharmacology, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Models, Animal, Organ Preservation/adverse effects, Organ Preservation Solutions/pharmacology, Pulmonary Edema/etiology, Random Allocation, Reperfusion Injury/etiology, Swine