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A novel and stable "two-hit" acute lung injury model induced by oleic acid in piglets

Xiaofeng Li1 email, Yinglong Liu1 email, Qiang Wang1 email, Yaobin Zhu1 email, Xiaodong Lv1 email and Jinping Liu2 email

Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Center, Cardiovascular Institute and Fuwai Hospital, Beijing, PR China

Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Department of Cardiopulmonary Bypass, Cardiovascular Institute and Fuwai Hospital, Beijing, PR China

author email corresponding author email

Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica 2009, 51:17doi:10.1186/1751-0147-51-17

Published: 30 March 2009

Abstract

Background

Children are susceptible to pulmonary injury, and acute lung injury (ALI) often results in a high mortality and financial cost in pediatric patients. Evidence has showed that oleic acid (OA) plays an important role in ALI. Therefore, it has special significance to study ALI in pediatric patients by using OA-induced animal models. Unfortunately, the animal model hs a high mortality due to hemodynamic instability. The aim of this study was to establish a novel hemodynamically stable OA-induced ALI model in piglets with two hits.

Methods

18 Chinese mini-piglets were randomized into three groups: group C (received saline-ethanol solution), group T (received OA-ethanol solution in routine administration manner) and group H (received OA-ethanol solution in two-hit manner). Hemodynamic and pulmonary function data were measured. Histopathological assessments were performed.

Results

Two piglets in group T died of radical decline of systemic blood pressure. Group T showed more drastic hemodynamic changes than group H especially during the period of 5 to 30 minutes after OA administration. Both Group T and group H all produced severe lung injury, while group C had no significant pathologic changes. OA-induced hypotension might be caused by pulmonary hypertension rather than comprised left ventricular function.

Conclusion

OA leads to severe pulmonary hypertension which results in hemodynamic fluctuation in OA-induced ALI model. It is the first report on hemodynamic stable ALI animal model in piglets using two-hit method. The two-hit ALI animal model fulfils the ALI criteria and has the following characteristics: hemodynamic stability, stable damage to gas exchange and comparability with pediatric patients in body weight and corresponding age. The two-hit ALI animal model can be used to study the basic mechanism and the therapeutic strategies for pediatric ALI.


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