Exogenous surfactant prevents hyperoxiainduced lung injury in adult mice.
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Date
2019
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Abstract
Background: In addition to the risk of developing ventilator-induced lung injury, patients with ARDS are at risk of developing hyperoxic injury due the supra-physiological oxygen supplementation clinically required to reverse hypoxemia. Alterations of endogenous surfactant system participate in the pulmonary dysfunction observed in ARDS. Administration of exogenous surfactant could have protective effects during hyperoxia. Methods: Male BALB/c mice (8–10 weeks), a strain highly sensitive to hyperoxia, received the exogenous surfactant-containing protein SP-B and SP-C by intranasal instillation 12 h before starting 24 h of exposure to hyperoxia in an inhalation chamber and were compared to mice receiving hyperoxia alone and to controls subjected to normoxia. Results: Compared to the hyperoxia group, the administration of exogenous surfactante was able to reduce lung inflammation through a reduction in the influx of neutrophils and inflammatory biomarkers such as TNF, IL-17, and HMGB1 expression. The antioxidante activity prevented oxidative damage by reducing lipid peroxidation and protein carbonylation and increasing superoxide dismutase activity when compared to the hyperoxia group. Conclusion: Our results offer new perspectives on the effects and the mechanism of exogenous surfactant in protecting the airway and lungs, in oxygen-rich lung microenvironment, against oxidative damage and aggravation of acute inflammation induced by hyperoxia.
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Keywords
BALB/c mice, Oxidative stress
Citation
BEZERRA, F. S. et al. Exogenous surfactant prevents hyperoxiainduced lung injury in adult mice. Intensive Care Medicine Experimental, v. 7, p. 19,mar. 2019. Disponível em: <https://icm-experimental.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40635-019-0233-6>. Acesso em: 10 fev. 2020.