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Cyclooxygenase inhibition prevents PMA-induced increases in lung vascular permeability
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1990
Year
Acute Lung InjuryCyclooxygenase InhibitionLung InflammationPharmacotherapyOxidative StressInflammationThrombosisPulmonary PharmacologyPublic HealthPma AdministrationPulmonary CirculationVascular BiologyPharmacologyPulmonary Vascular DiseaseCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyEndothelial DysfunctionPulmonary PhysiologyLung Vascular PermeabilityMedicine
The effect of cyclooxygenase inhibition in phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-induced acute lung injury was studied in isolated constant-flow blood-perfused rabbit lungs. PMA caused a 51% increase in pulmonary arterial pressure (localized in the arterial and middle segments as measured by vascular occlusion pressures), a 71% increase in microvascular permeability (measured by the microvascular fluid filtration coefficient, Kf), and a nearly threefold increase in perfusate thromboxane (Tx) B2 levels. Cyclooxygenase inhibition with three chemically dissimilar inhibitors, indomethacin (10(-7) and 10(-6) M), meclofenamate (10(-6) M), and ibuprofen (10(-5) M), prevented the Kf increase without affecting the pulmonary arterial pressure increase or resistance distribution changes after PMA administration. The specific role of TxA2 was investigated by pretreatment with OKY-046, a specific Tx synthase inhibitor, or infusion of SQ 29548, a TxA2 receptor antagonist; both compounds failed to protect against either the PMA-induced permeability or the vascular resistance increase. These results indicate that cyclooxygenase-mediated products of arachidonic acid other than TxA2 mediate the PMA-induced permeability increase but not the hypertension.