ovalbumin and Hyperoxia

ovalbumin has been researched along with Hyperoxia* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for ovalbumin and Hyperoxia

ArticleYear
Neonatal oxygen exposure alters airway hyper-responsiveness but not the response to allergen challenge in adult mice.
    Pediatric allergy and immunology : official publication of the European Society of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, 2014, Volume: 25, Issue:2

    Infants born prematurely are often treated with supplemental oxygen, which can increase their risk for airway hyper-responsiveness (AHR), asthma, reduced lung function, and altered responses to respiratory viral infections later in childhood. Likewise, exposure of newborn mice to hyperoxia alters baseline pulmonary mechanics and the host response to influenza A virus infection in adult mice. Here, we use this mouse model to test the hypothesis that neonatal hyperoxia also promotes AHR and exacerbated allergen-induced symptoms in adult mice.. Baseline lung mechanics and AHR measured by methacholine provocation were assessed in adult male and female mice exposed to room air or 100% oxygen (hyperoxia) between post-natal days 0-4. AHR and lung inflammation were evaluated after adult female mice were sensitized with ovalbumin (OVA) plus alum and challenged with aerosolized OVA.. Baseline lung compliance increased and resistance decreased in adult female, but not male, mice exposed to neonatal hyperoxia compared with siblings exposed to room air. Neonatal hyperoxia significantly enhanced methacholine-induced AHR in female mice, but did not affect allergen-induced AHR to methacholine or lung inflammation.. Increased incidence of AHR and asthma is reported in children born prematurely and exposed to supplemental oxygen. Our findings in adult female mice exposed to hyperoxia as neonates suggest that this AHR reported in children born prematurely may reflect non-atopic wheezing due to intrinsic structural changes in airway development.

    Topics: Age Factors; Airway Resistance; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Bronchial Hyperreactivity; Bronchial Provocation Tests; Bronchoconstriction; Bronchoconstrictor Agents; Disease Models, Animal; Female; Hyperoxia; Lung; Lung Compliance; Male; Methacholine Chloride; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Molecular Sequence Data; Ovalbumin; Pneumonia; Risk Factors; Sex Factors

2014
Effects of hyperoxia and allergic airway inflammation on cough reflex intensity in guinea pigs.
    Physiological research, 2002, Volume: 51, Issue:5

    Toxic influence of high oxygen concentration on pulmonary function and structures has been known for many years. However, the influence of high oxygen concentration breathing on defensive respiratory reflexes is still not clear. In our previous experiments, we found an inhibitory effect of 100 % oxygen breathing on cough reflex intensity in healthy guinea pigs. The present study was designed to detect the effects of hyperoxia on cough reflex in guinea pigs with allergic airway inflammation. In the first phase of our experiment, the animals were sensitized with ovalbumin. Thirty-two sensitized animals were used in two separate experiments according to oxygen concentration breathing: 100 % or 50 % oxygen for 60 h continuously. In each experiment, one group of animals was exposed to hyperoxia, another to ambient air. The cough reflex was induced both by aerosol of citric acid before sensitization, then in sensitized animals at 24 h and 60 h of exposition to oxygen/air in awake animals, and by mechanical stimulation of airway mucosa in anesthetized animals just after the end of the experiment. In contrast to 50 % oxygen, 100 % oxygen breathing leads to significant decrease in chemically induced cough in guinea pigs with allergic inflammation. No significant changes were present in cough induced by mechanical stimulation of airways.

    Topics: Animals; Bronchial Hyperreactivity; Citric Acid; Cough; Female; Guinea Pigs; Hyperoxia; Hypersensitivity; Ovalbumin; Oxygen; Reflex; Respiratory Mechanics

2002