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Acute Cigarette Smoke Exposure Causes Lung Injury in Rabbits Treated with Ibuprofen
11
Citations
17
References
1987
Year
Acute Lung InjuryAsthmaLung InflammationLung ClearancePharmacotherapyTobacco ControlRabbits TreatedRespiratory ToxicologyNicotinePulmonary PharmacologyToxicologySmoking Related Lung DiseaseAllergyPharmacologyEmergency MedicineInhalation ToxicologyDynamic Lung ComplianceMedicineLung Injury
We studied lung clearance of aerosolized technetium-labeled diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (99mTcDTPA), plasma concentrations of 6-keto-PGF1 alpha and thromboxane B2, and pulmonary edema as indices of lung injury in rabbits exposed to cigarette smoke (CSE). Forty-six rabbits were randomly assigned to 4 groups: control sham smoke exposure (SS, N = 9), sham smoke exposure ibuprofen-pretreated (SS-I, N = 10), CSE (N = 9), sham smoke exposure ibuprofen-pretreated (SS-I, N = 10), CSE (N = 9), and CSE ibuprofen-pretreated (CSE-I, N = 19). Ibuprofen (cyclooxygenase eicosanoid inhibitor) was administered as a single daily intramuscular injection (25 mg/kg) for 7 days before the experiment. Cigarette or sham smoke was delivered by syringe in a series of 5, 10, 20, and 30 tidal volume breaths with a 15-min counting period between each subset of breaths to determine 99mTcDTPA biological half-life (T1/2). In the ibuprofen pretreated group, CSE caused significant decreases in 99mTcDTPA T1/2 and dynamic lung compliance. Furthermore, these changes in lung function were accompanied by severe injury to type I alveolar cell epithelium, pulmonary edema, and frequently death of the rabbits. These findings suggest that inhibition of the cyclooxygenase pathway before CSE exacerbates lung injury in rabbits.
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