Overventilation-induced airspace acidification increases susceptibility to Pseudomonas pneumonia

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Abstract

Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is the most frequent nosocomial infection in critically ill patients. Local pH variations affect bacterial growth. This study investigated the role and mechanisms of airspace acidification by mechanical ventilation (MV) in Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA)-induced VAP. Mice were subjected to high (HVt:34mL/kg) or low (LVt:9mL/kg) tidal volume MV, intratracheally infected with PA. Alveolar pH was determined via fluorescence microscopy in murine lungs ex vivo. Bacterial growth and adhesion on cyclically stretched A549 and human alveolar epithelial cells was examined. Upon PA infection, HVt mice showed increased alveolo-capillary permeability, elevated lung and blood leukocyte counts, and higher bacterial load in lungs and extrapulmonary organs as compared to LVt controls. HVt MV induced acidification of alveolar lining fluid (ALF) in lungs and decreased pulmonary expression of Na+/H+ exchanger 1 (NHE1). Inhibition of NHE1 enhanced PA growth in vitro on alveolar epithelial cells and increased pulmonary bacterial loads in LVt-MV mice in vivo. In a novel murine VAP model, key characteristics of PA-VAP were replicated. HVt MV induced mild VILI with acidification of airway lining fluid, increasing susceptibility to PA pneumonia. NHE1 was identified as critical factor for MV-induced airspace acidification, and thus as potential target to combat PA-VAP.

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