Pentoxifylline does not protect against hyperoxic lung injury in rats

1994 
Hyperoxia has been used extensively as a model of acute lung injury. The drug pentoxifylline has been shown to have a protective effect in other models of lung injury. We sought to determine whether pentoxifylline protects against hyperoxic lung injury in rats by decreasing the accumulation of neutrophils within the lung. A total of 84 rats were studied. Twenty four rats were randomized into four groups. Two groups of rats were pretreated for 48 h with either pentoxifylline (20 mg.kg-1) or saline, and then exposed to > 95% O2 for 60 h while treatments continued. Two groups of control rats received the same treatment regimens as the O2-exposed animals, but breathed room air. Neutrophil accumulation in the lung was quantified both by histology and myeloperoxidase activity. Lung neutrophil accumulation increased in the oxygen-exposed group receiving pentoxifylline as compared to oxygen- or air-exposed rats receiving saline injections. Total glutathione was higher in lung homogenates from the hyperoxic, pentoxifylline-treated group than in homogenates from the other three groups. To study survival, 60 rats were exposed to > 95% O2 for 120 h, 30 rats were pretreated with pentoxifylline, and 30 received saline. Survival after 120 h of exposure to hyperoxia was not altered by pentoxifylline treatment (pentoxifylline treated: 6 out of 30 survived; saline treated: 2 out of 30 survived). We conclude that pentoxifylline does not reduce mortality or lung injury in rats exposed to hyperoxia and is associated with an increase in lung neutrophil accumulation.
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