005 mg kg iv), and ventilated with a constant flow ventilator (Samay VR15; Universidad de la Republica, Montevideo, Uruguay) with the following parameters: frequency of 100 breaths/min, tidal volume (VT) of 0.2 ml, and fraction of inspired oxygen of 0.21. The anterior chest wall was surgically removed and a positive end-expiratory pressure
of 2 cm H2O applied. A laparotomy was performed and heparin (1000 IU) was intravenously injected in the vena cava. The trachea was clamped at end-expiration, and the abdominal aorta and vena cava were sectioned, yielding a massive hemorrhage that quickly killed the animals. The right lung was then removed, fixed in 3% buffered formaldehyde and paraffin embedded. Four-μm-thick slices were cut and stained with hematoxylin-eosin. Lung morphometry analysis was performed with an integrating eyepiece with a coherent system consisting of a grid with 100 points and 50 lines (known length) coupled to PCI-32765 cell line a conventional light microscope (Olympus BX51, Olympus Latin America-Inc., Brazil). The volume fractions of the lung occupied by collapsed alveoli (alveoli with rough or plicate walls), normal pulmonary areas or hyperinflated structures (alveolar ducts, alveolar sacs, or alveoli, all with maximal chord length in air >120 μm) were determined by the point-counting technique (Weibel, 1990) across 10 random, non-coincident microscopic fields. Briefly, points falling on collapsed, normal pulmonary areas
or hyperinflated structures were
counted and divided by the total number of points in each microscopic Protirelin field. Enlargement of air selleck screening library spaces was evaluated using mean linear intercept measurement (Lm) (Dunnill, 1964). The fraction of neutrophils and mononuclear cells was also evaluated. Collagen (Picrosirius-polarization method) and elastic fibers (Weigert’s resorcin fuchsin method with oxidation) (Fullmer et al., 1974) were quantified in alveolar septa and pulmonary vessel wall. Three slices of 2 mm × 2 mm × 2 mm were cut from three different segments of the left lung and fixed [2.5% glutaraldehyde and phosphate buffer 0.1 M (pH = 7.4)] for electron microscopy (JEOL 1010 Transmission Electron Microscope, Tokyo, Japan) analysis. For each lung electron microscopy image (20/animal), the following alterations were analyzed: (a) alveolar-capillary membrane damage, (b) type II pneumocyte lesion, (c) endothelial cell lesion, (d) neutrophil infiltration, (e) elastic fiber breakdown, (f) collagen fiber deposition, and (g) apoptotic cells (Abreu et al., 2011a). The pathologic findings were graded according to a 5-point semi-quantitative severity-based scoring system as: 0 = normal lung parenchyma, 1 = changes in 1–25%, 2 = changes in 26–50%, 3 = changes in 51–75%, and 4 = changes in 76–100% of examined tissue. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase biotin-dUTP nick end labeling staining was used to assay cellular apoptosis (Oliveira et al., 2009).