Journal of Applied Physiology Journal of Applied Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 95: 265-271, 2003; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00362.2002
8750-7587/03 $5.00
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Comparison of elastic properties and contractile responses of isolated airway segments from mature and immature rabbits

R. Ramchandani,1 X. Shen,1 S. J. Gunst,2 and R. S. Tepper1

Departments of 1Pediatrics and 2Cellular and Integrative Physiology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202

Submitted 24 April 2002 ; accepted in final form 5 March 2003

Immature rabbits have greater maximal airway narrowing with bronchoconstriction in vivo compared with mature animals. As isolated immature lungs have a lower shear modulus, it is unclear whether the greater airway narrowing in the immature lung is secondary to less tethering between the airways and the lung parenchyma or to differences in the mechanical properties of the mature and immature airways. In the present study, we compared the mechanical properties of fluid-filled, isolated, intraparenchymal airway segments of the same generation from mature and immature rabbits. Stimulation with ACh resulted in greater airway narrowing in immature than mature bronchi. The immature bronchi were more compliant, had a lower resting airway volume, and were more collapsible compared with the mature bronchi. When the airways were contracted with ACh under isovolume conditions, the immature bronchi generated greater active pressure, and they were more sensitive to ACh than were mature bronchi. Our results suggest that maturational differences in the structure and function of the airways in the absence of the lung parenchyma can account for the greater maximal narrowing of immature than mature airways in vivo.

airways; maturation; mechanics



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: R. S. Tepper, James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children, Section of Pediatric Pulmonology, Rm. 4270, 702 Barnhill Drive, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202 (E-mail: rtepper{at}iupui.edu).




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