thiourea has been researched along with Lung-Diseases* in 24 studies
3 review(s) available for thiourea and Lung-Diseases
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A new approach to the investigation of oxidative injury to the pulmonary endothelium: use of angiotensin-converting enzyme as a marker.
Oxidative injury to the pulmonary endothelium plays and important role in lung pathology. Oxidants (that accumulate in lung tissue upon hyperoxia or hypoxia, or are released from activated leukocytes) can destroy endothelial cells. Investigation of the mechanisms of oxidative endothelial injury and the choice of valid criteria with which to measure these pathological deviations are therefore of great importance. Among the criteria used to assess endothelial injury (e.g. accumulation of the products of lipid peroxidation, enhancement of pulmonary microvascular permeability, morphological changes), monitoring of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) is of great interest because it is associated with the endothelial surface and thus reflects endothelial status. Assessment of lung rather than serum ACE activity is the best indicator of endothelial injury. For a comprehensive evaluation of endothelial status, not only total ACE activity in lung tissue but also ACE accessibility to circulating ligands should be monitored. Radiolabelled ACE substrates have been used as ligands in the perfusion of isolated lungs of experimental animals. Radiolabelled monoclonal antibody (Mab) to ACE has been proposed as an alternative ligand, because a drastic decrease in uptake of this Mab by the lungs upon lung injury has been shown. This approach is extremely sensitive: a decrease in antibody uptake occurs even upon mild (nonoedematous) oxidative lung injury, when other indicators, such as lung and serum ACE activity, accumulation of the products of lipid peroxidation, and microvascular permeability, remain unchanged. The use of radiolabelled Mab allows the pulmonary microvascular status to be monitored by gamma-scintigraphy. Topics: Biomarkers; Endothelium; Humans; Immunoglobulin G; Lipid Peroxidation; Lung; Lung Diseases; Oxygen; Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A; Thiourea | 1991 |
The response of the lung to foreign compounds that produce free radicals.
Topics: Air Pollutants; Animals; Bleomycin; Carbon Tetrachloride; Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning; DNA; Dogs; Free Radicals; Haplorhini; Humans; Hydrogen Peroxide; In Vitro Techniques; Lipid Peroxides; Lung; Lung Diseases; Mice; NADP; Nitrofurantoin; Nitrous Oxide; Oxidation-Reduction; Ozone; Paraquat; Rats; Superoxides; Thiourea | 1986 |
Biochemical mechanisms in chemical-induced lung injury: roles of metabolic activation.
Topics: Animals; Biotransformation; Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning; Drug Tolerance; Furans; Glutathione; Humans; Hydrocarbons; Inactivation, Metabolic; Lung; Lung Diseases; Microsomes; Nitrofurantoin; Paraquat; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Thiourea; Time Factors | 1980 |
21 other study(ies) available for thiourea and Lung-Diseases
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Stimulated pulmonary cell hyperplasia underlies resistance to alpha-naphthylthiourea.
The rodenticide alpha-naphthylthiourea (ANTU) causes pulmonary edema and pleural effusion that leads to death via pulmonary insufficiency. Rats become resistant to the lethal effect of ANTU if they are first exposed to a small, nonlethal dose of ANTU. Young rats are also resistant to ANTU. The mechanism by which rats develop resistance by a prior, small dose exposure has yet to be determined. Growth factor induced-pulmonary hyperplasia has been demonstrated to attenuate ANTU-induced lung leak. We hypothesized that a small dose of ANTU protects against a large dose through pulmonary cell hyperplasia induced by the protective dose. Furthermore, we hypothesized that this hyperplasia is associated with altered transcription of growth factors. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (175-225 g) were treated with a low dose of ANTU (5 mg ANTU/kg; ANTU(L)) 24 h before challenge with a 100% lethal dose of ANTU (70 mg ANTU/kg; ANTU(H)) resulting in 100% protection against the lethal effect of ANTU(H). ANTU(L) protection against ANTU(H) lasted for 5 days, slowly phased out, all being lost by day 20. Injury was assessed by estimating pulmonary vascular permeability and through histopathological examination. ANTU(H) alone resulted in an increase in pulmonary edema leading to animal death. However, injury was prevented if the rats were first treated with ANTU(L). There was a stimulation of pulmonary cell hyperplasia in the lungs of ANTU(L) treated rats as measured by [3H]-thymidine and bromodeoxyuridine incorporation. Treatment with the antimitotic agent colchicine abolished ANTU(L)-induced resistance to ANTU(H). ANTU resistant rats were also resistant to the lethal effect of paraquat. Paraquat is not taken up by pneumocytes if they are undergoing hyperplasia. ANTU(L) administration resulted in an up regulation of gene transcription for keratinocyte growth factor, transforming growth factor-beta, keratinocyte growth factor receptor and epidermal growth factor receptor as determined through reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. A significant increase in transforming growth factor-alpha was not observed. These findings collectively suggest that ANTU(L)-induced pulmonary cell hyperplasia underlies resistance to ANTU(H). Furthermore, the stimulation of hyperplasia may be due to altered growth factor and growth factor receptor expressions. Topics: Animals; Capillary Permeability; Cell Nucleus; Colchicine; Drug Resistance; Herbicides; Hyperplasia; Lung Diseases; Male; Mitosis; Paraquat; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; Rodenticides; Thiourea; Thymidine; Time Factors | 2000 |
Potentiation of oxidant-induced toxicity in hamster lung slices by dimethylthiourea.
Dimethylthiourea (DMTU) is an effective scavenger of reactive oxygen metabolites. This property has been successfully exploited, experimentally, in the protection of cells and tissues against oxidative damage. In this study, however, we have observed that levels of nonprotein sulfhydryls (NPSH) in hamster lung slices were markedly decreased by incubation with 10 or 40 mM DMTU. These changes were associated with morphological signs of injury, increased levels of oxidised glutathione (GSSG), and an increased activity of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), suggesting that the loss of NPSH was due to their oxidation. Incubation with 40 mM, but not 10 mM DMTU, also resulted in a decreased ability to oxidise [6-14C]glucose or to synthesise proteins, suggesting that at the high concentration, DMTU may cause functional impairment of the tissue. Furthermore, the ability of the slices to accumulate putrescine decreased after incubation with the oxidative toxins paraquat (PQ), tert-butyl hydroperoxide (t-BOOH) or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and was further decreased by co-incubation with DMTU. Putrescine uptake, a function specific to the alveolar type I and II epithelial cells, was not affected by incubation with DMTU alone. DMTU did not exacerbate the effect of the nonoxidative toxin iodoacetamide (IAA) on putrescine uptake but it did affect markers of general cell damage or dysfunction. We suggest, therefore, that the toxicity of oxidants toward lung tissue is potentiated in alveolar epithelial cells by DMTU. Topics: Animals; Cricetinae; Drug Synergism; Female; Free Radicals; Hydrogen Peroxide; Iodoacetamide; Lung; Lung Diseases; Male; Mesocricetus; Microscopy, Electron; Oxidants; Oxidation-Reduction; Paraquat; Peroxides; Putrescine; tert-Butylhydroperoxide; Thiourea | 1994 |
Phorbol myristate acetate-induced lung injury: involvement of reactive oxygen species.
Using lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence, isolated rat lungs perfused with physiological salt-Ficoll solution were studied to test whether phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-induced lung injury was mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS). PMA (0.03 micrograms ml-1) caused small but significant increases in lung ROS levels and pulmonary arterial perfusion pressure (Ppa) but did not induce lung oedema. PMA (0.15 micrograms ml-1) induced lung oedema with large increases in ROS production and Ppa. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) inhibited the increases in ROS, Ppa, and lung oedema. Catalase and dimethylthiourea inhibited lung oedema but did not attenuate the increases in ROS and Ppa entirely. Indomethacin attenuated lung oedema partially but did not inhibit the increases in ROS and Ppa. These data indicate that PMA-induced lung injury is dependent on PMA concentration and ROS are responsible for such lung injury. Thromboxane plays a minor role for PMA-induced lung injury. The different effects of oxygen radical scavengers suggest that different radical species contribute to the increased pulmonary vascular response and lung injury. Topics: Acridines; Animals; Catalase; Indomethacin; Luminescent Measurements; Lung; Lung Diseases; Male; Pressure; Pulmonary Artery; Pulmonary Edema; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reactive Oxygen Species; Superoxide Dismutase; Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate; Thiourea | 1992 |
Acute lung injury following reperfusion after ischemia in the hind limbs of rats.
In this study, we proposed that oxygen free radicals participate in the acute pulmonary injury that follows limb ischemia/reperfusion. Using an established model of hind limb ischemia, reproducible lung injury occurred after reperfusion. Lung microvascular permeability was measured with 125I-BSA and increased two-fold after 30 minutes of reperfusion. Pulmonary injury was blocked with DMSO, DMTU, allopurinol, indomethacin, and SOD plus catalase. The degree of pulmonary neutrophil sequestration as assessed by tissue myeloperoxidase activity was significantly diminished in animals pretreated with antioxidants. Pretreatment with indomethacin did not attenuate the neutrophil sequestration within the pulmonary parenchyma. These data suggest that increased lung microvascular permeability and neutrophil accumulation occur following hind limb ischemia/reperfusion. Therapeutic interventions with oxygen radical inhibitors blocked this process, while the prostaglandin inhibitor, indomethacin, only reduced lung permeability. Topics: Allopurinol; Animals; Capillary Permeability; Catalase; Dimethyl Sulfoxide; Free Radicals; Hindlimb; Indomethacin; Lung; Lung Diseases; Neutrophils; Peroxidase; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Reperfusion Injury; Superoxide Dismutase; Thiourea | 1991 |
Pulmonary toxicity of thioureas in the rat.
Administration of alpha-naphthylthiourea (ANTU) to rats causes damage to pulmonary endothelial cells and possibly mesothelial lining cells that together may account for the massive pleural effusion characteristic of thiourea toxicity. Using 35S-thiourea as a model compound, the extent of binding of 35S to lung proteins correlated well with the extent of edema, suggesting that the extent of binding of thiourea metabolites is a measure of lung toxicity. ANTU and phenylthiourea (PTU) compete for 35S binding to lung slices, suggesting that these toxins may act in a similar way. Binding of 35S in lung slices from resistant rats is much less than in controls, and resistance cannot be explained by differences in either whole body metabolism or redistribution of thiourea in vivo. Lung glutathione levels (in vitro and in vivo) in normal and resistant rats following thiourea administration were essentially the same. However, at doses of thiourea that cause pleural effusion, there was an increase in total lung glutathione. Topics: Animals; Binding, Competitive; Drug Resistance; Endothelium; Glutathione; Lung Diseases; Mesoderm; Protein Binding; Rats; Rodenticides; Thiourea | 1990 |
Polymorphonuclear leukocyte cytoplasts mediate acute lung injury.
Injection of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) into polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN)-depleted, PMN cytoplast-repleted New Zealand White rabbits caused the development of acute lung injury in vivo. PMN cytoplasts are nucleus- and granule-free vesicles of cytoplasm capable of releasing toxic O2 radicals but incapable of releasing granule enzymes. PMN cytoplasts when activated by PMA reduced 66 +/- 12.7 nmol of cytochrome c compared with 2.6 +/- 0.7 nmol in their resting state and did not release a significant quantity of granule enzymes (P greater than 0.05). Injection of PMA into New Zealand White rabbits caused a significant decrease (P less than 0.05) in the number of circulating cytoplasts. Increases in lung weight-to-body weight ratios in PMA-treated rabbits (9.8 +/- 0.5 X 10(-3] compared with saline-treated rabbits (5.3 +/- 0.2 X 10(-3] were also noted. Levels of angiotensin-converting enzyme in lung lavage as well as the change in alveolar-arterial O2 ratio correlated with the numbers of cytoplasts in lung lavage (P = 0.001, r = 0.84 and P = 0.0166, r = 0.73, respectively). Albumin in lung lavage increased to 1,700 +/- 186 mg/ml in PMA-treated rabbits from 60 +/- 30 mg/ml in saline-treated rabbits. These changes were attenuated by pretreatment of rabbits with dimethylthiourea (DMTU). In vitro, cytoplasts were able to mediate increases in endothelial monolayer permeability. This was evidenced by increases in fractional transit of albumin across endothelial monolayers when treated with PMA-activated cytoplasts (0.08 +/- 0.01 to 0.28 +/- 0.02).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Animals; Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid; Cell Membrane Permeability; Chemotaxis, Leukocyte; Endothelium; Humans; Lung; Lung Diseases; Neutrophils; Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A; Pulmonary Edema; Rabbits; Superoxides; Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate; Thiourea | 1988 |
Effects of oleic acid-, alpha-naphthylthiourea-, and phorbol myristate acetate-induced microvascular damage on indexes of pulmonary endothelial function in anesthetized dogs.
To study the value of indexes of endothelial cell function in experimentally induced pulmonary microvascular injury, lung damage was produced in anesthetized dogs by intravenous injection of oleic acid (OA; n = 6), alpha-naphthylthiourea (ANTU; n = 5), or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA; n = 6). Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activity in serum and simultaneous measurements of serotonin (SER) and propranolol (PROP) pulmonary extraction along with several physiologic parameters were determined and compared with those obtained in a control group (n = 5) before and then at 2-h intervals for 8 h after administration of the toxic agent. ACE activity in serum showed a sustained and significant increase in the PMA and OA groups throughout the whole study period, whereas it decreased significantly at 4 h in the ANTU group. SER pulmonary uptake decreased significantly, but slightly, only in the PMA group at 8 h (-5%). At 6 and 8 h respectively, PROP extraction dropped significantly in the PMA (-11 and -13%) and OA (-13 and -19%) groups. This decrease in PROP extraction was likely to result from physiologic changes due to the development of pulmonary edema as suggested by the correlation between the changes in amine uptake and those affecting pulmonary artery pressure and total static respiratory compliance. The lack of effects on SER uptake by the lungs under these experimental conditions indicate that dissociation exists between metabolic dysfunction of pulmonary endothelial cells and fluid leakage. Topics: Anesthesia; Animals; Blood Pressure; Dogs; Endothelium, Vascular; Lung; Lung Diseases; Microcirculation; Oleic Acid; Oleic Acids; Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A; Propranolol; Pulmonary Circulation; Serotonin; Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate; Thiourea; Vascular Diseases; Vascular Resistance | 1988 |
Effect of acute lung injury on metabolism of adenine nucleotides in rat perfused lung.
1. The hydrolysis of adenosine di- and monophosphate (ADP, AMP) was studied in perfused lungs isolated from rats treated with alpha-naphthylthiourea (ANTU) to induce acute lung injury. This injury is associated with damage to the endothelium, the locus of the ADP and AMP hydrolysing enzymes. 2. Treatment with ANTU did not change the proportion of [3H]-ADP surviving a single passage through the pulmonary circulation, at any time up to 50 h after ANTU. Less than 8% and 2% respectively of 1 or 0.1 mumol ADP, given as a bolus, appeared in lung effluent. 3. The metabolites of ADP, AMP and adenosine in lung effluent were increased fro 2 h after ANTU. 4. Metabolism of [3H]-AMP as substrate was always low but, following ANTU treatment, the adenosine content of lung effluent increased four fold. 5. It appears that, in spite of considerable endothelial cell damage, as demonstrated by pulmonary oedema, the ectoenzymes catalysing ADP and AMP hydrolysis were relatively little affected by ANTU. Topics: Adenine Nucleotides; Adenosine Diphosphate; Adenosine Monophosphate; Animals; Chromatography, Ion Exchange; Chromatography, Thin Layer; In Vitro Techniques; Lung; Lung Diseases; Male; Organ Size; Perfusion; Rats; Rodenticides; Thiourea; Time Factors | 1988 |
The binding of cationic probes to apical and basal surfaces of rat lung capillary endothelium and of endothelial cells in tissue culture.
The reasons for greater lung vascular permeability to anionic macromolecules are not understood. In order to determine whether the luminal or abluminal surfaces of lung capillary endothelial cells differ with respect to surface charge, we compared the binding of cationic ferritin, an electron dense probe, with these cell surfaces in lung capillaries. Because lung capillaries are not normally permeable to cationic ferritin, lungs were examined from rats with increased permeability edema caused by pretreatment with alpha-naphthylthiourea (ANTU). We found that more cationic ferritin particles bound to the luminal than to the abluminal surfaces of lung capillary endothelium. In order to determine whether this was due to inaccessibility of cationic ferritin to the lung interstitium, we also compared cationic ferritin binding to the apical and basal surfaces of bovine calf aortic and main pulmonary arterial endothelial cells in tissue culture. We found that more cationic ferritin bound to the apical than to the basal surface of the cultured cells. The binding of cationic ferritin to cultured endothelial cells was due to charge since native, anionic ferritin did not bind to either surface and binding was decreased by neuraminidase pretreatment of cultures. Cultures incubated with thiourea, another thiocarbamide that causes increased permeability edema in vivo, also showed greater binding of cationic ferritin to the apical cell surface, suggesting that the differences seen in vivo were not due to thiocarbamide injury. However, another cationic probe, ruthenium red, bound to both the apical and basal surfaces of cultured endothelial cells. These results suggest that the basal endothelial cell surface does not lack anionic sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Animals; Capillaries; Culture Techniques; Endothelium; Ferritins; Lung Diseases; Male; Perfusion; Pulmonary Circulation; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Ruthenium; Ruthenium Red; Thiourea | 1987 |
Modulation of normobaric pulmonary oxygen toxicity by hydroxyl radical inhibition.
The effects of hydroxyl radical inhibition on an experimental model of normobaric pulmonary oxygen toxicity have been studied. The metal ion chelator, desferrioxamine (which inhibits hydroxyl-radical generation) or the hydroxyl-radical scavenger, dimethylthiourea (DMTU), were administered in an attempt to block hydroxyl-radical-mediated tissue injury. Lung injury was monitored in Sprague-Dawley rats by examining lung histology and bronchoalveolar lavage and by assessing pulmonary capillary permeability using the 125I-albumin lung permeability index and the lung weight:body weight ratio. Control animals had lung permeability indices 0.183 +/- 0.005 and lung weight to body weight ratio of 4.50 +/- 0.10 (all as mean +/- SEM). With increased duration of exposure to hyperoxia, there was a progressive increase in pulmonary inflammation, with thickening of alveolar membranes and atelectasis and a progressive increase in lung permeability indices (0.434 +/- 0.088 at 24 hrs; 0.954 +/- 0.165 at 48 hrs; and 1.55 +/- 0.214 at 60 hrs); and lung weight to body weight ratio (5.28 +/- 0.11 at 24 hrs; 6.54 +/- 0.23 at 48 hrs; and 8.91 +/- 0.51 at 60 hrs). Treatment with desferrioxamine provided significant protection from lung injury after 24 hrs of hyperoxia (eg., lung permeability indices 0.250 +/- 0.018; lung weight to body weight ratio 4.68 +/- 0.14, both p less than 0.025; cf. 24-hr hyperoxia controls) but no reduction in pulmonary injury was observed after 48 and 60 hrs of hyperoxia exposure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Animals; Capillary Permeability; Deferoxamine; Hydroxides; Hydroxyl Radical; Lung; Lung Diseases; Male; Organ Size; Oxygen; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Thiourea | 1987 |
Role of hydroxyl radicals derived from granulocytes in lung injury induced by phorbol myristate acetate.
Lung injury induced by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) is closely associated with toxic oxidants released from activated granulocytes. But the major toxic oxidant causing lung damage is not really known. We have, therefore, conducted investigations using various oxygen radical scavengers. The intravenous administration of dimethylthiourea (DMTU), a potent hydroxyl radical scavenger, or of superoxide dismutase (SOD), a superoxide anion scavenger, plus catalase, a hydrogen peroxide scavenger, to rabbits intravenously injected with PMA prevented biochemical data and cellularity indicative of lung damage in lung lavages. Morphologically, the lungs of PMA-injected rabbits revealed mild interstitial edema, aggregates of granulocytes within the interstitial capillaries, and the increase of granulocytes in alveolar spaces. Furthermore, there was direct morphologic evidence of pulmonary endothelial cell disruption. In rabbits treated with DMTU or SOD plus catalase, there was no evidence of destructive changes in the lungs. SOD-treated rabbits did not show evidence of protection from PMA-induced lung injury. Only a little protection was provided by catalase treatment. Moreover, in the ultracytochemical study for examination of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) generation, the number of H2O2-generated granulocytes remarkably decreased in lung lavages of catalase-treated rabbits, but destructive changes were observed in the lungs. In contrast, though the number of H2O2-generated granulocyte was not decreased in lung lavages of DMTU-treated rabbits, treatment with DMTU could afford protection from lung injury. These data indicate that the hydroxyl radical, a toxic oxidant derived from stimulated granulocytes, is deeply involved in the pathogenesis of PMA-induced lung injury. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid; Catalase; Cell Count; Free Radicals; Granulocytes; Histocytochemistry; Hydrogen Peroxide; Hydroxides; Hydroxyl Radical; Lung; Lung Diseases; Male; Organ Size; Rabbits; Superoxide Dismutase; Superoxides; Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate; Thiourea | 1987 |
Acetylcholine-induced pulmonary vasodilation in lung vascular injury.
Recent work with isolated blood vessels has emphasized the importance of intact endothelium when the relaxation of vascular smooth muscle is induced by acetylcholine (ACh). However, the physiologic significance of this endothelial-dependent ACh response in a complete organ circulation is unclear. We questioned whether diminished ACh vasodilation would result from damage of lung vascular endothelium and whether this response could be used as an indication of endothelial injury. We therefore induced pulmonary endothelial cell injury in one rat model by repeated injections of alpha-naphthyl thiourea (ANTU) and in a second rat model by exposing rats for 52 h to 100% oxygen at a barometric pressure of 760 torr (hyperoxia). Rats injected with Tween 80, the solvent for ANTU, or exposed to ambient Denver air served as the respective control animals. The isolated lungs of these rats were perfused with a recirculating cell- and plasma-free, physiological salt solution to study the effect of ACh or NaCl infusion on pulmonary perfusion pressure and vascular responsiveness. ANTU-treated rats demonstrated an intact vasodilatory response after ACh infusion when compared with the solvent control animals. The immediate pulmonary vasodilation after ACh infusion was slightly enhanced in the hyperoxic rat lung when compared with the rats exposed to ambient air, but there was no difference between these groups in the prolonged depression of vascular responsiveness to hypoxia or angiotensin II. Thus, in both models of lung endothelial cell injury, the pulmonary vascular responses to ACh were intact.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Acetylcholine; Acute Disease; Animals; Chronic Disease; In Vitro Techniques; Lung Diseases; Male; Microbial Collagenase; Microscopy, Electron; Oxygen; Perfusion; Pulmonary Circulation; Pulmonary Edema; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Thiourea; Vascular Diseases; Vasodilation | 1986 |
Effects of endothelial cell injury on pulmonary vascular reactivity.
Using the thiocarbamide model of acute lung injury in rats, we found that alpha-naphthylthiourea (ANTU) caused lung endothelial cell injury, as evidenced by increased permeability edema and decreased angiotensin I conversion. These effects were associated with enhanced pulmonary vascular reactivity. Recurrent ANTU lung injury caused pulmonary hypertension. The water-soluble thiocarbamide thiourea caused cultured vascular endothelial cells to release neutrophil chemoattractant activity. We speculate that endothelial cell injury may modulate the function of vascular smooth muscle and blood leukocytes. Topics: Angiotensin II; Animals; Endothelium; Hypertension, Pulmonary; Lung; Lung Diseases; Male; Muscle, Smooth, Vascular; Neutrophils; Pulmonary Edema; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Thiourea | 1985 |
Cutaneous thermal burn and oxidant-mediated acute lung injury: appearance in serum of lung-related LDH isoenzyme.
Previous studies from our laboratory have demonstrated that thermal injury to the skin of rats is associated with the production of oxygen radicals by complement-activated blood neutrophils, resulting in acute lung injury as demonstrated by increases in lung vascular permeability and morphological evidence of vascular endothelial cell damage, interstitial edema, and alveolar hemorrhage. In the present study, the analysis of sera from thermally injured rats reveals an isoenzyme profile for lactate dehydrogenase (LDH;EC 1.1.1.27) that is compatible with origin from lung. The appearance of LDH-4 isoenzyme in serum of thermally injured rats correlates linearly with indices of lung damage, supporting the results of previous studies suggesting that thermal trauma to the skin can cause oxygen radical production by complement-activated blood neutrophils with resultant acute microvascular injury in the lung interstitium. Furthermore, interventions that protect from oxidant-mediated lung injury (catalase, scavengers of hydroxyl radical, iron chelators or neutrophil depletion) result in significant reductions in serum levels of the LDH-4 isoenzyme following thermal injury to the skin. Thus, measurements of LDH isoenzyme patterns in serum appear to be useful in monitoring tissue damage such as oxygen radical-mediated acute lung injury. Topics: Animals; Burns; Deferoxamine; Free Radicals; Isoenzymes; L-Lactate Dehydrogenase; Lung; Lung Diseases; Lung Injury; Neutrophils; Oxidants, Photochemical; Oxygen; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Skin; Thiourea | 1985 |
Oxygen radicals and the microcirculation.
Topics: Endothelium; Free Radicals; Humans; Lung Diseases; Microcirculation; Models, Biological; Oxygen; Superoxides; Thiourea | 1983 |
Potential mechanisms of lung injury from hydroxyl radical.
Topics: Bacteria; Biological Assay; Dimethyl Sulfoxide; Free Radicals; Humans; Hydrogen Peroxide; Hydroxides; Hydroxyl Radical; Lung; Lung Diseases; Neutrophils; Staphylococcus aureus; Thiourea | 1981 |
Endotoxin protection against oxygen-induced acute and chronic lung injury.
Small dosages of endotoxin (100--500 micrograms/kg) provide significant protection against the acute manifestations of pulmonary O2 toxicity and lethality. Ninety-seven percent of endotoxin-treated adult rats survived a 72-h exposure to greater than or equal to 95% O2 with mimimal lung changes, compared to 32% of control animals (P less than 0.01). Exposure to greater than or equal to 95% O2 for 7 days resulted in a 20% survival rate in untreated control rats vs. 98% survival in endotoxin-treated rats (P LESS THan 0.01). Histological evaluation of lung from survivors revealed substantially less collagen and reticular fiber deposition in the endotoxin-treated animal lungs. Endotoxin treatment was associated with increased activity of the protectant antioxidant enzyme systems of the lung in an apparent dose-response manner. Endotoxin's protective activity against O2 toxicity does not appear to depend on an initial toxic insult to the lung like with alpha-naphthylthiourea, oleic acid, or alloxan treatment. The data support a protective role for endotoxin against the acute and the more chronic manifestations of O2-induced pulmonary injury. Topics: Alloxan; Animals; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Endotoxins; Hemorrhage; Lung Diseases; Oleic Acids; Oxygen; Pulmonary Edema; Pulmonary Fibrosis; Rats; Thiourea | 1979 |
[Data on the physiology of experimental, non-hemodynamic, pulmonary edema].
Topics: Edema; Hemodynamics; Lung Diseases; Pulmonary Edema; Thiourea | 1955 |
[Supronal therapy of actinomycosis of the lungs].
Topics: Actinomycosis; Drug Combinations; Lung Diseases; Sulfadiazine; Sulfonamides; Thiourea | 1954 |
Effect of ANTU-induced pulmonary edema on the alveolar-arterial oxygen pressure gradient in dogs.
Topics: Animals; Dogs; Edema; Lung Diseases; Oxygen; Pulmonary Edema; Respiration; Thiourea | 1953 |
The physiology and cytology of pulmonary edema and pleural effusion produced in rats by alpha-naphthyl thiourea (ANTU).
Topics: Animals; Exudates and Transudates; Lung Diseases; Pleura; Pleural Effusion; Pulmonary Edema; Rats; Thiourea | 1952 |