Abstract: | Cummings, James J. Nitric oxide decreases lung liquidproduction in fetal lambs. J. Appl.Physiol. 83(5): 1538-1544, 1997.To examine theeffect of nitric oxide on fetal lung liquid production, I measured lungliquid production in fetal sheep at 130 ± 5 days gestation (range122-137 days) before and after intrapulmonary instillation ofnitric oxide. Thirty-one studies were done in which net lung luminalliquid production (Jv) was measured by plotting the change in lung luminal liquid concentration ofradiolabeled albumin, an impermeant tracer that was mixed into the lungliquid at the start of each study. To see whether changes inJvmight be associated with changes in pulmonary hemodynamics, pulmonary and systemic pressures were measured and left pulmonary arterial flowwas measured by an ultrasonic Doppler flow probe. Variables weremeasured during a 1- to 2-h control period and for 4 h after a smallbolus of isotonic saline saturated with nitric oxide gas (10 or 100%)was instilled into the lung liquid. Control (saline) instillations(n = 6) caused no change in anyvariable over 6 h. Nitric oxide instillation significantly decreasedJv and increased pulmonary blood flow;these effects were sustained for 1-2 h. There was also asignificant but transient decrease in pulmonary arterial pressure. Thusintrapulmonary nitric oxide causes a significant decrease in lungliquid and is associated with a decrease in pulmonary vascularresistance. In a separate series of experiments either amiloride orbenzamil, which blocks Na+transport, was mixed into the lung liquid before nitric oxide instillation; still, there was a similar reduction in lung liquid production. Thus the reduction in lung liquid secretion caused bynitric oxide does not appear to depend on apicalNa+ efflux. |