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Journal of Applied Physiology 1993-Dec

Pulmonary interstitial edema in the pig after heavy exercise.

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W Schaffartzik
J Arcos
K Tsukimoto
O Mathieu-Costello
P D Wagner

Keywords

Abstract

During exercise (especially in hypoxia), the alveolar-arterial O2 tension difference increases. This impairment of pulmonary gas exchange is caused partly by diffusion disequilibrium, but it has also been shown that an exercise-induced increase in ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) inequality develops. Possible explanations of increased VA/Q mismatch include nonuniform pulmonary vasoconstriction, reduced gas mixing in the large airways, airway obstruction, and the development of interstitial pulmonary edema. To directly determine whether the latter develops in high-intensity short-term exercise, we exercised pigs on a motor-driven treadmill at the highest speed that they could sustain for 6-7 min. Heart rate reached 274 +/- 5 min-1 in the exercised group, confirming that the pigs reached a near-maximal level of exercise. While running, the pigs were killed by an intravenous overdose of pentobarbital. Postmortem, the lungs were immediately removed, drained of blood, weighed, and then airway fixed with 10% formaldehyde. Four tissue blocks of the right lung of each pig were taken from the ventral and dorsal areas of the upper and lower lobes, respectively. They were stained with hematoxylin and eosin and prepared for histological examination by light microscopy. There was no difference in the lung-to-body weight ratio between exercised pigs (7.72 +/- 0.87 g/kg) and a nonexercised control group (7.70 +/- 0.68 g/kg). However, we found a significantly higher percentage of pulmonary arteries with perivascular edema in exercised (33.8 +/- 3.4%) than in nonexercised pigs (20.0 +/- 4.0%; P < 0.02). Thus, perivascular edema (and thus possibly also parenchymal interstitial edema) can occur during short-term heavy exercise.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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