Efficacy of Intratracheal Budesonide-Surfactant Combined Therapy in
Surfactant-Insufficient Rat Lungs with Lipopolysaccharide Insult
Abstract
Objectives: Intratracheal steroid therapy for lipopolysaccharide
(LPS)-induced acute lung injury (ALI) remains challenging particularly
in surfactant-deficiency lungs, a common problem of preterm infants.
Surfactant has been used as a vehicle for intratracheal steroid in the
treatment of other types of ALI. This study investigated the efficacy of
intratracheal budesonide (BUD) delivered by two concentrations of
surfactant in the treatment of LPS-induced ALI in
surfactant-insufficiency rat lungs. Methods: Male adult rats were
anesthetized and ventilated. Our ALI model was established by repeated
saline lavage to produce surfactant insufficiency, followed by
intratracheal LPS instillation. Five study groups (n=5 for each) with
different intratracheal treatments following ALI were used: Control (no
treatment), BUD (IT-NS-BUD; BUD in saline); IT-DS-BUD (BUD in diluted
surfactant); IT-FS-BUD (BUD in full-strength surfactant); IT-FS
(full-strength surfactant). Cardiopulmonary variables were monitored 4 h
post injury. Histological and immunohistochemical assessments of the
lungs were performed. Results: The IT-FS-BUD and IT-FS groups presented
better gas exchange, less metabolic acidosis, less oxygen index, and
more stable hemodynamic changes than the IT-DS-BUD, IT-NS-BUD, and
Control groups. The total lung injury scores assessed by histological
examination were ordered as follows: IT-FS-BUD < IT-DS-BUD or
IT-FS < IT-NS-BUD < Control. The immunostaining
intensities of lung myeloperoxidase showed the following order:
IT-NS-BUD, IT-DS-BUD, or IT-FS-BUD < Control or IT-FS. Only
the IT-FS-BUD group displayed a smaller immunostaining intensity of lung
TNF-α than the control group. Conclusion: Among our therapeutic
strategies, intratracheal BUD delivered by full-strength surfactant
confers an optimal protection against LPS-induced ALI in
surfactant-insufficiency rat lungs.