摘要

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ( COPD) is a devastating lung disorder characterized by sustained airway flow restriction that is not fully reversible. The precise pathogenic mechanisms are unknown, but it is clear that cigarette smoking and chronic inflammatory stimulation are the major causes of COPD. Lung inflammation associated with COPD involves multiple cytokines, aggregation, and activation of neutrophils in the airway and lung tissue, and release of proteases and oxygen free radicals. In this study, a rat model of COPD was established by daily cigarette smoke exposure plus endotoxin treatment (the experimental group). Respiratory curves were recorded by the BL-420 biological signal collecting and processing system. Furthermore, the contents of inflammatory mediators, intercellular adhesion molecular (ICAM)-1 and interleukin (IL)-1 beta, in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) were determined by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay for experimental, smoke-exposed only (control), and untreated (blank) rat groups. Protein expression levels of ICAM-1 and IL-1 beta in the lung tissue were also compared among groups by the immunohistochemical streptavidin-peroxidase method. The COPD model rats exhibited severe dyspnea and lung inflammation as evidenced by significantly prolonged expiratory duration, higher respiratory rate, elevated ICAM-1 and IL-1 beta in BALF, and higher ICAM-1 and IL-1 beta protein expression in lung tissue compared to control and blank group rats. Chronic cigarette smoke exposure plus endotoxin is a feasible and reliable model of COPD that recapitulates many clinical signs and pathogenic responses. ICAM-1 and IL-1 beta upregulation are possible early contributors to COPD-associated inflammatory lung injury.