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A Mouse Model of Orotracheal Intubation and Ventilated Lung Ischemia Reperfusion Surgery Publisher Pubmed



Liao WI1 ; Maruyama D1 ; Kianian F1, 2 ; Tat C1 ; Tian X1 ; Hellman J1 ; Doddo JM3 ; Prakash A1
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care, University of California San Francisco and San Francisco General Hospital, United States
  2. 2. Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran
  3. 3. Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, United States

Source: Journal of Visualized Experiments Published:2022


Abstract

Ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury frequently results from processes that involve a transient period of interrupted blood flow. In the lung, isolated IR permits the experimental study of this specific process with continued alveolar ventilation, thereby avoiding the compounding injurious processes of hypoxia and atelectasis. In the clinical context, lung ischemia reperfusion injury (also known as lung IRI or LIRI) is caused by numerous processes, including but not limited to pulmonary embolism, resuscitated hemorrhagic trauma, and lung transplantation. There are currently limited effective treatment options for LIRI. Here, we present a reversible surgical model of lung IR involving first orotracheal intubation followed by unilateral left lung ischemia and reperfusion with preserved alveolar ventilation or gas exchange. Mice undergo a left thoracotomy, through which the left pulmonary artery is exposed, visualized, isolated, and compressed using a reversible slipknot. The surgical incision is then closed during the ischemic period, and the animal is awakened and extubated. With the mouse spontaneously breathing, reperfusion is established by releasing the slipknot around the pulmonary artery. This clinically relevant survival model permits the evaluation of lung IR injury, the resolution phase, downstream effects on lung function, as well as two-hit models involving experimental pneumonia. While technically challenging, this model can be mastered over the course of a few weeks to months with an eventual survival or success rate of 80%-90%. © 2022 JoVE Journal of Visualized Experiments.