Critical Care

official impact factor 4.60

Letter

A role for adrenomedullin in the pathogenesis of alveolar edema

Michael Eisenhut

Author Affiliations

University of Liverpool, Institute of Child Health, Eaton Road, Liverpool L12 2AP, UK

Critical Care 2006, 10:418 doi:10.1186/cc4997

Published: 4 August 2006

First paragraph (this article has no abstract)

Christ-Crain and colleagues [1] established in their work a close relationship between pro-adrenomedullin levels and severity of community acquired pneumonia. This raises the question of whether this peptide or its precursor adrenomedullin are involved in the pathogenesis of the respiratory compromise in pneumonia. Adrenomedullin induces nitric oxide (NO) production in endothelial cells through an increase in intracellular calcium levels, which activates NO synthetase [2]. NO has been linked to endotoxin induced acute lung injury in which the NO scavenger N-acetyl cysteine reduced exhaled NO levels and lung water [3]. The mechanism by which NO reduces alveolar fluid clearance and contributes to the extent of pulmonary fluid accumulation in lung injury has been clarified: NO reduces both the activity of apical alveolar epithelial sodium channels and the baso-lateral alveolar epithelial sodium-potassium ATPase, which regulate alveolar sodium and water absorption. Sodium absorption hereby generates the osmotic gradient, drawing alveolar fluid through alveolar epithelial aquaporin channels and paracellular pathways [4,5].