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J Appl Physiol (April 17, 2008). doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.01207.2007
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Submitted on November 12, 2007
Accepted on April 10, 2008

COMPUTATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF AIRWAY WALL STIFFNESS IN VIVO IN ALLERGICALLY INFLAMED MOUSE MODELS OF ASTHMA

Ana Cojocaru1, Charles G. Irvin2, Hans C Haverkamp3, and Jason H.T. Bates4*

1 Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, United States
2 Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, United States; Vermont Lung Center, Room 226, Beaumont Ave., Burlington, Vermont, 05405-0075, United States
3 Environmental & Health Sciences, Johnson State College, Johnson, Vermont, United States
4 University of Vermont, United States; Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jason.h.bates{at}uvm.edu.

Allergic inflammation is known to cause airways hyperresponsiveness in mice. However, it is not known whether inflammation affects the stiffness of the airway wall, which would alter the load against which the circumscribing smooth muscle shortens when activated. Accordingly, we measured the time-course of airway resistance immediately following intravenous methacholine injection in acutely and chronically allergically inflamed mice. We estimated the effective stiffness of the airway wall in these animals by fitting to the airway resistance profiles a computational model of a dynamically narrowing airway embedded in elastic parenchyma. Effective airway wall stiffness was estimated from the model fit, and was found not to change from control in either the acute or chronic inflammatory groups. However, the acutely inflamed mice were hyperresponsive compared to controls, which we interpret as reflecting increased delivery of methacholine to the airway smooth muscle through a leaky pulmonary endothelium. These results support the notion that acutely inflamed BALB/c mice represent an animal model of functionally normal airway smooth muscle in a transiently abnormal lung.







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