• Shock · Aug 2005

    The evolution of isolated bilateral lung contusion from blunt chest trauma in rats: cellular and cytokine responses.

    • Krishnan Raghavendran, Bruce A Davidson, James A Woytash, Jadwiga D Helinski, Cristi J Marschke, Patricia A Manderscheid, Robert H Notter, and Paul R Knight.
    • Department of Surgery, State University of New York, Buffalo 14215, USA. kraghave@ecmc.edu
    • Shock. 2005 Aug 1;24(2):132-8.

    AbstractLung contusion is the leading cause of death from blunt thoracic trauma in adults, but its mechanistic pathophysiology remains unclear. This study uses a recently developed rat model to investigate the evolution of inflammation and injury in isolated lung contusion. Bilateral lung contusion with minimal cardiac trauma was induced in 54 anesthetized rats by dropping a 0.3-kg hollow cylindrical weight onto a precordial shield (impact energy, 2.45 Joules). Arterial oxygenation, pressure-volume (P-V) mechanics, histology, and levels of erythrocytes, leukocytes, albumin, and inflammatory mediators in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) were assessed at 8 min, at 4, 12, 24, and 48 h, and at 7 days after injury. The role of neutrophils in the evolution of inflammatory injury was also specifically studied by depleting these cells with intravenous vinblastine before lung contusion. Arterial oxygenation was severely reduced at 8 min to 24 h postcontusion, but became almost normal by 48 h. Levels of erythrocytes, leukocytes, and albumin in BAL were increased at

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