Publications by authors named "A Keith Tanswell"

Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is a chronic lung injury characterized by impaired alveologenesis that may persist into adulthood. Rat models of BPD using varying degrees of hyperoxia to produce injury either cause early mortality or spontaneously recover following removal of the inciting stimulus, thus limiting clinical relevance. We sought to refine an established rat model induced by exposure to 60% O from birth by following hyperoxia with intermittent hypoxia (IH).

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Neutrophil (PMNL) influx precedes lung macrophage (LM) influx into the lung following exposure of newborn pups to 60% O2. We hypothesized that PMNL were responsible for the signals leading to LM influx. This was confirmed when inhibition of PMNL influx with a CXC chemokine receptor-2 antagonist, SB-265610, also prevented the 60% O2-dependent LM influx, LM-derived nitrotyrosine formation, and pruning of small arterioles.

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Postnatal alveolarization is regulated by a number of growth factors, including insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) acting through the insulin-like growth factor receptor-1 (IGF-R1). Exposure of the neonatal rat lung to 60% O2 for 14 days results in impairments of lung cell proliferation, secondary crest formation, and alveologenesis. This lung injury is mediated by peroxynitrite and is prevented by treatment with a peroxynitrite decomposition catalyst.

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Rationale: Use of the anti-inflammatory agent dexamethasone in premature infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia has been curtailed, and no alternative anti-inflammatory agents are approved for this use. Our objective was to use a neonatal rat model of bronchopulmonary dysplasia to determine if an highly selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor, 5,5-dimethyl-3-(3-fluorophenyl)4-(4-methylsulfonyl)phenyl-2(5H)-furanone (DFU; 10 µg/g body weight), could prevent inflammatory cell influx and protect against lung injury.

Methods: Neonatal rats exposed to air or 60% O2 for 14 days from birth either received daily i.

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IGF-I, IGF-II, and the IGF-I receptor are widely distributed throughout the neonatal rat lung on days 4, 7, 10, and 14 of life, with a similar abundance at each of these time points. Injection of 20 μg/g of a truncated soluble IGF-I receptor on days 2 and 5 of life, to decoy ligand away from the endogenous IGF-I receptor, reduced lung weight and lung-to-body weight ratio, reduced lung tissue fraction, and impaired alveolar formation, as assessed by secondary crest formation and mean linear intercepts on day 7 of life. Lung procollagen I content and elastin fiber density were also reduced.

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