Bruno do Valle Pinheiro, Cândida Maria Moreira Horta, Bruno Guedes Baldi, Leonardo de Lucca Schiavon, Ângela Maria Gollner, Júlio César Abreu de Oliveira
Introduction: Surgical procedures requiring aortic occlusion have been associated with pulmonary reperfusion injury. The authors studied the pulmonary edema in a reperfusion injury model by aortic occlusion in rats. Material and methods: Thirty-three Wistar rats were anesthetized with intraperitoneal injection of sodium pentobarbital (20 mg/kg). Using a midline abdominal incision, the infra-renal aorta was isolated and the animals were randomized into three groups. Ischemia-reperfusion group (IRG, n = 5): rats that underwent 30 min of aorta occlusion and were followed during 120 min of reperfusion. Ischemia group (IG, n = 5): rats that underwent 30 min of aorta occlusion. Control group (CG, n = 5): rats that underwent sham operations without aorta occlusion and were followed during 150 min. Histopathologic examination of the right lung was performed. The pulmonary edema was studied by morphometric analysis and so was the leukocytes infiltration. Eighteen rats (6 rats in each group) were studied with respect to lung fresh/dry weight ratio. ANOVA was used to analyze the morphometric results and the lung fresh/dry weight ratio, with Bonferroni adjustment for paired multiple comparisons. Animals of the IRG presented more pulmonary edema than those of the IG and CG (0.24 vs. 0.17 and 0.17, p < 0.001). There was no difference between the groups regarding the lung fresh/dry weight ratio. There were more inflammatory cells in the lungs of the rats submitted to ischemia-reperfusion. The authors concluded that infra-renal abdominal aorta cross-clamping and unclamping are associated with pulmonary edema. This edema is not induced by elevation of the hydrostatic pressure due to the aortic occlusion, since it was not seen in animals
that were only submitted to ischemia.
Keywords: ischemia, reperfusion, pulmonary edema, inbred strains rats