Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 151, No. 6, 06 1995, 1946-1955.
Alveolar fibrosis and capillary alteration in experimental pulmonary silicosis in rats
O Kawanami, HX Jiang, H Mochimaru, H Yoneyama, S Kudoh, H Ohkuni, H Ooami and VJ Ferrans
Pathology and Clinical Research Laboratory, Nippon Medical School Second Hospital, Kawasaki-shi, Japan.
To analyze the evolution of fibrotic and vascular changes in pulmonary
silicosis, ultrastructural and immunohistochemical studies were made of the
lungs of rats given a single intratracheal injection of silica particles.
Early lesions were characterized by accumulations of macrophages and
neutrophils in alveolar lumina and interstitium and by damage to alveolar
capillaries and epithelial cells. The intraluminal masses of inflammatory
cells developed into granulomas and became associated with myofibroblasts
that migrated from the interstitium through the damaged epithelial lining.
Type II epithelial cells and bronchiolar cuboidal cells proliferated
rapidly to line the intraluminal granulomas, incorporating them into the
interstitium. This process mediated the transition from intraalveolar
fibrosis to interstitial fibrosis. Vascular damage was repaired by
proliferation and migration of endothelial cells. Some endothelial cells in
alveolar capillaries expressed Factor VIII-related antigen at 2 wk after
silica infusion. In normal animals, this feature was present in
peribronchiolar but not in alveolar capillaries. Two patterns of
endothelial cell migration were shown by staining for proliferating- cell
nuclear antigen. The first pattern was characterized by endothelial cells
that extended their cytoplasm over preexisting, denuded basement membranes
and replaced necrotic cells in alveolar capillaries. At 4 mo after injury,
some of these cells had developed fenestrations. The second pattern
consisted of budlike sproutings that developed only in peribronchiolar
connective tissue. These observations indicate that peribronchiolar vessels
are sources for renewal of alveolar capillary endothelium as well as for
neovascularization.
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Copyright © 1995 American Thoracic Society
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