Enkvetchakul B, Beasley J, Bottje W
Department of Poultry Science, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville 72701, USA.
Poult Sci. 1995 Oct;74(10):1677-82. doi: 10.3382/ps.0741677.
Two experiments were conducted to determine the effect of low ventilation or cool temperature environments on pulmonary arteriole hypertrophy. Male broilers were maintained under control or low ventilation conditions in Experiment 1, whereas male broiler breeder by-product chicks were exposed to cool temperature conditions in Experiment 2. Birds were randomly selected for histological evaluation of lung tissue in both experiments. In Experiment 1, birds that had pulmonary hypertension syndrome (PHS+) exhibited a greater degree of inflammation of lung tissue at 5 and 7 wk of age than controls or birds that did not have PHS (PHS-). These PHS+ birds also had higher numbers of cartilaginous osseous nodules at 3 and 7 wk of age than controls. Morphometric analyses revealed that PHS+ birds in Experiment 1 had a thicker medial layer associated with 100 to 200 microns diameter pulmonary arterioles at 7 wk of age, and 50 to 100 microns arterioles at 3 and 7 wk of age than PHS- or control birds. In Experiment 2, PHS+ birds exhibited a thicker medial layer in pulmonary arterioles at 7 wk of age than did PHS- birds, but there were no differences in medial layer thickness at 5 wk of age nor were there differences in the degree of inflammation or amount of osseous nodule formation between PHS+ and PHS- birds at 5 and 7 wk of age. Thus, pulmonary arteriole hypertrophy was observed in birds having PHS in response to both low ventilation and cool temperature environments and this hypertrophy occurred with or without a coincident inflammatory response in lung tissue.