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Elastolytic Activity in Pulmonary Lavage Fluid from Patients with Adult Respiratory-Distress Syndrome

List of authors.
  • Catherine T. Lee, Ph.D.,
  • Alan M. Fein, M.D.,
  • Michael Lippmann, M.D.,
  • Henry Holtzman, M.D.,
  • Philip Kimbel, M.D.,
  • and George Weinbaum, Ph.D.

Abstract

To test the hypothesis that adult respiratory-distress syndrome (ARDS) is related to increased activity of the proteolytic enzyme elastase released from neutrophils in the lung, we determined the differential white-cell count, the elastolytic activity, the source of elastase, and the concentration and activity of the endogenous protease inhibitor alpha-1-antiprotease (α-1-AP) in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from 23 patients with ARDS and from 55 patients without this syndrome. Neutrophil predominance (>80 per cent) was observed in 18 of 23 patients with ARDS. High elastolytic activity of neutrophil origin was found in 12 of 23 patients with ARDS (52 per cent), in none of 16 normal nonsmokers (P<0.01), in two of 17 normal smokers, and in three of 22 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Although there were no significant differences in α-1-AP concentrations, its activity was reduced in eight of nine patients with ARDS and high elastolytic activity. We conclude that in many patients with ARDS, high levels of neutrophil elastolytic activity in the lungs are associated with reduced α-1-AP function. (N Engl J Med. 1981; 304:192–6.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by a U.S. Public Health Service Grant (HL 20994) from the Division of Heart, Lung, and Blood Diseases, National Institutes of Health; a Biomedical Research Support Grant from the National Institutes of Health; and a grant (901 A) from the Council for Tobacco Research, Inc.

We are indebted to Miriam Polisher for excellent technical assistance, to Dr. H. James for gifts of goat antihuman α-1-AP and pure human α-1-AP, to Dr. U. Kucich for antibody against human neutrophil elastase, and to Mrs. Dorothy Aherne and Miss Gina Kapusnick for assistance in preparing the manuscript.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Medicine, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Temple University Health Science Center, York and Tabor Roads, Philadelphia, PA 19141, where reprint requests should be addressed to Dr. Fein.

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