Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 152, No. 4, 10 1995, 1347-1352.
Increased respiratory system resistance and bronchial smooth muscle hypertrophy in children with acute postoperative pulmonary hypertension
MB Schindler, DJ Bohn, AC Bryan, E Cutz and M Rabinovitch
Department of Critical Care, Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Following surgery for congenital heart disease, there is often an increased
reactivity of the pulmonary vasculature to stimuli, resulting in rapid
increases in pulmonary artery pressure and a clinical impression of stiff
lungs. Lung mechanics were measured in 30 children, mean age 6.7 +/- 4.1
mo, who were ventilated and had pulmonary artery pressure monitoring
following surgery for congenital heart disease. A group of 15 patients
developed postoperative pulmonary hypertension. In these patients,
respiratory system resistance was 43% higher (p = 0.001) and compliance 11%
lower (p = 0.004) during acute pulmonary hypertension compared with
baseline pulmonary artery pressure. No changes in resistance or compliance
were seen in the 15 patients who did not develop pulmonary hypertension.
The changes in lung mechanics interfered with mechanical ventilation,
resulting in a 9.4% rise in PaCO2 during pulmonary hypertension. The
bronchial smooth muscle was found to be increased by 68%, and the vascular
smooth muscle was more than twice normal in lung biopsies from 9 pulmonary
hypertension patients compared with 6 age-matched postmortem controls
patients who had no cardiac or pulmonary disease. The
bombesin-immunoreactive pulmonary neuroendocrine cells (PNEC) were also
increased in the pulmonary hypertension patients. These findings suggest a
coconstriction and cohypertrophy of bronchial and vascular smooth muscle
during pulmonary hypertension. Mediators, such as bombesin, endothelin-1,
and serotonin, are known to be produced by PNEC and may be involved in the
observed vasoconstriction, increased respiratory system resistance, and
smooth muscle hypertrophy.
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Copyright © 1995 American Thoracic Society
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