Rationale: Density-based morphometric studies have demonstrated decreased capillary density in infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) and in BPD-like animal models, leading to the prevailing view that microvascular development is disrupted in BPD. Objective: To perform a comprehensive analysis of the early and late effects of ventilation on pulmonary microvascular growth in preterm infants. Methods: Postmortem lung samples were collected from ventilated preterm infants who died between 23 and 29 wk ("short-term ventilated") or between 36 and 39 wk ("long-term ventilated") corrected postmenstrual age. Results were compared with age-matched infants or stillborn infants ("early" and "late" control subjects). Microvascular growth was studied by anti-platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM)-1 immunohistochemistry, quantitative stereology, analysis of endothelial cell proliferation, and Western blot analysis of pulmonary PECAM-1 protein levels. Measurements: Measurements were made of capillary density, volume of air-exchanging parenchyma, volume of microvascular endothelial cells, Ki67 labeling index of endothelial cells, and PECAM-1/actin protein levels. Main Results: Lungs of long-term ventilated infants showed a significant (more than twofold) increase in volume of air-exchanging parenchyma and a 60% increase in total pulmonary microvascular endothelial volume compared with late control subjects, associated with 60% higher pulmonary PECAM-1 protein levels. The marked expansion of the pulmonary microvasculature in ventilated lungs was, at least partly, attributable to brisk endothelial cell proliferation. The microvasculature of ventilated lungs appeared immature, retaining a saccular architectural pattern. Conclusions:The pulmonary microvasculature of ventilated preterm infants displayed marked angiogenesis, nearly proportionate to the growth of the air-exchanging lung parenchyma. These results challenge the paradigm of microvascular growth arrest as a major pathogenic factor in BPD.Keywords: bronchopulmonary dysplasia; chronic lung disease of prematurity; neonatal lung disease Despite major advances in perinatal medicine, including the introduction of surfactant therapy, antenatal glucocorticoids, and new ventilator strategies, preterm newborns treated with ventilation and supplemental oxygen frequently develop bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a chronic lung disease of newborn infants associated with significant mortality and morbidity (1). BPD in the postsurfactant era is seen primarily in very low birth weight infants and affects 30% of infants born at 24 to 28 wk, many of whom will require long-term ventilation and/or supplemental oxygen (2, 3).The dominant pathologic finding at autopsy in postsurfactant BPD is an arrest in alveolar development, resulting in lungs with large and simplified airspaces showing varying degrees of interstitial fibrosis (2, 4-8). Impairment of alveolar formation in BPD leads to long-term global reduction in alveolar number and gas-exchange surface area (6, 7). The ...
In utero tracheal occlusion (TO) is a potent stimulus of fetal lung growth, and is currently being applied in clinical trials to treat severe forms of pulmonary hypoplasia. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of timing of TO on pulmonary growth and maturation rates. Fetal rabbits (term = 31 d) were subjected to in utero tracheal clipping at 24 (late pseudoglandular stage) or 27 d of gestation (late canalicular/early terminal sac stage). Sham-operated littermates served as controls (C). Animals were killed at time intervals ranging from 1 to 6 d (early group) or 1 to 3 d (late group) after occlusion. Lung growth was measured by computerized stereologic volumetry and 5'-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) pulse labeling. Pneumocyte II population kinetics were analyzed using a combination of anti-surfactant protein-A and BrdU immunohistochemistry and computer-assisted morphometry. Statistical analysis was performed using unpaired Student's t test. Early TO was followed by an initial 3-d stagnation of growth and subsequently a dramatic acceleration of growth (BrdU-labeling index [LI] 10.1 +/- 0. 6% in TO versus 2.7 +/- 0.5% in C at 29 d, P < 0.001). In contrast, late TO induced an immediate and sustained moderate increase of lung growth (BrdU-LI 2.8 +/- 0.9% in TO versus 1.1 +/- 0.2% in C at 30 d, P < 0.05), associated with relatively more pronounced air-space distension. Whereas late TO caused no significant alterations in type II cell density or proliferation, early TO was followed by a marked increase in type II cell proliferation, paradoxically associated with dramatic reduction of type II cell density after 29 d. The effects of intrauterine TO on fetal lung growth and type II cell kinetics critically depend on the gestational age, and thus on the maturity of the lungs at the time of surgery. These findings have important clinical implications with respect to the timing of fetal interventions aimed at promoting lung growth. The fetal rabbit provides an invaluable model to study the mechanics and age dependency of TO-induced lung growth.
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