EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY REVIEW, 2006;15: 115-121. doi:10.1183/09059180.00010102
© 2006 the European Respiratory Society
Stereological analysis of acute lung injury
M. Ochs
CORRESPONDENCE: M. Ochs, Institute of Anatomy, Experimental Morphology, University of Bern, Baltzerstrasse 2, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland. Fax: 41 316313807. E-mail: ochs{at}ana.unibe.ch
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ABSTRACT
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Acute lung injury is associated with a variety of histopathological alterations, such as oedema formation, damage to the components of the bloodair barrier and impairment of the surfactant system. Stereological methods are indispensable tools with which to properly quantitate these structural alterations at the light and electron microscopic level. The stereological parameters that are relevant for the analysis of acute lung injury are reviewed in the present article.
KEYWORDS: Acute lung injury, microscopy, morphometry, stereology
Stereology is the method of choice with which to obtain quantitative structural data in microscopy. It is therefore an essential tool for making statistically valid comparisons in experimental studies on acute lung injury (ALI), e.g. when the effects of different treatment modalities are tested. The present article describes the stereological parameters that are relevant for the assessment of the degree of injury in ALI. For an introduction to and a more comprehensive treatment of stereology, the reader is referred to the literature [16] and to the article by NYENGAARD and GUNDERSEN [7] in the present issue of the European Respiratory Review (ERR). General aspects of lung stereology have been reviewed recently [8, 9].
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DEFINITION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY OF ALI
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The clinical entity of ALI in its most severe form, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), was originally described by ASHBAUGH et al. [10] in 1967. The most widely adopted current definition of ALI and ARDS is based on the recommendations given by the American European Consensus Conference (AECC) committee [11]. ALI and ARDS are defined as a syndrome of acute and persistent lung inflammation with increased vascular permeability characterised by bilateral chest infiltrates, hypoxia (partial pressure of arterial oxygen/fraction of inspired oxygen <40 kPa (<300 mmHg) for ALI and <26.7 kPa (<200 mmHg) for ARDS) and exclusion of a cardiogenic cause (no left atrial hypertension). For the purposes of the present article, the term ALI also includes ARDS as the severe end of the spectrum of ALI. While the AECC definition is simple to apply in the clinical setting and it reflects the fact that the severity of clinical lung injury varies, its major disadvantage is that it does not contain any information on the underlying cause [12]. The development of ALI is associated with a variety of clinical disorders, including direct pulmonary injury (e.g. from pneumonia or aspiration) and indirect pulmonary injury (e.g. from trauma or sepsis) [12, 13]. A special form of ALI manifests as primary graft dysfunction in lung transplantation. Its main cause is ischaemia (I)/reperfusion (R) injury [1416].
Recent data suggest that ALI is more common than initially thought, with crude incidences at 5979 per 100,000 person-yrs in a US population [17]. Earlier data ranged
530 per 100,000 person-yrs (reviewed in [18, 19]). Currently reported mortality rates are
40% [17, 18].
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HISTOPATHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF ALI
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The histopathological features of ALI have been collectively termed diffuse alveolar damage. This is, however, a rather unspecific term. Diffuse alveolar damage can be divided into an early exudative phase, lasting for
1 week, and a later fibroproliferative phase in the second and third weeks [2024]. The exudative phase is characterised by interstitial and intra-alveolar oedema, intra-alveolar haemorrhage, neutrophil accumulation and hyaline membranes consisting of fibrin, plasma proteins and surfactant. At the ultrastructural level, swelling and necrosis of capillary endothelial cells and type I alveolar epithelial cells are noted, leading to a denudation of the basal lamina. In the fibroproliferative phase, organisation with proliferation of type II alveolar epithelial cells (cuboidal metaplasia), alveolar septal thickening and finally fibrosis are present. It is generally believed that the histopathological features of ALI reflect a typical response pattern to lung injury irrespective of the underlying cause. However, subtle but important differences, e.g. between ALI resulting from direct or indirect lung injury, are detectable by more detailed analysis involving electron microscopy and stereology [25].
The clinical symptoms of ALI are a direct consequence of severe damage to the bloodair barrier and subsequent protein-rich (permeability) pulmonary oedema [26, 27]. In ALI resulting from direct lung injury, alveolar epithelial cells are the first to be altered, while ALI resulting from indirect lung injury begins with alteration of capillary endothelial cells. Intra-alveolar oedema, together with other factors, such as reactive oxygen and nitrogen species and neutrophil elastase, leads to alterations in the pulmonary surfactant system, which, in turn, lead to the decreased compliance that can be observed in ALI patients [2834]. Thus, the components of the bloodair barrier and the surfactant system are primary targets in ALI and are therefore the structures that should be addressed when assessing ALI using stereology.
Although an animal model that unequivocally mimics key aspects of human ALI is still lacking [13], there are several animal models available that have proven useful in the study of either direct or indirect pulmonary injury [35]. In these animal models of ALI, the structural changes lead to significant disturbances of functional performance. It is thus important to quantitate them properly, i.e. by means of stereology.
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STEREOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF ALI
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Lung preparation for microscopy
The following two criteria must be met in order to perform proper lung stereology.
Adequate fixation and processing
Lung preparation protocols, from fixation over dehydration and embedding to sectioning, need to be controlled very carefully to avoid alterations of the tissue dimensions. It is impossible to perform good stereology with bad material. Since the fine structural details of the constituents of the alveolar bloodair barrier and the various surfactant forms are beyond the resolution limit even of advanced light microscopy, specimen preparation for transmission electron microscopy is a prerequisite for a complete stereological analysis of ALI. Subtle but functionally important alterations would go undetected at the light microscopic level, e.g. only by electron microscopy is it possible to distinguish permeability oedema due to primary bloodair barrier injury in ALI from the lesions in hydrostatic oedema [3639] and to analyse intra-alveolar surfactant subtype alterations [4043]. Primary chemical fixation "from behind" by controlled vascular perfusion with a glutaraldehyde-containing fixative followed by a phospholipid-stabilising protocol is the method of choice when subsequent stereological analysis of oedema and surfactant has to be performed [4449].
Systematic uniformly random sampling in a cascade sampling design
Stereology is basically a sampling theory and, thus, the steps to obtain the tissue samples that are finally analysed at the microscope are an integral part of a stereological study. Final results can only be unbiased when the sampling was such; the most efficient way to achieve this is known as systematic uniformly random sampling. In experimental studies, the starting point for sampling, and the end-point for data analysis, should always be the total lung volume (V(lung)). This can be measured by fluid displacement recorded by weighing [50] or, preferably, by the Cavalieri method [51, 52]. Starting from there, a cascade of sampling steps is followed, ideally in a fractionator design, via the light microscopic to the electron microscopic level (described by NYENGAARD and GUNDERSEN [7] in the present issue of the ERR). Thus, global parameters, such as the volumes of parenchyma (V(par, lung)) and nonparenchyma (V(nonpar, lung)) or surface areas of alveolar epithelium (S(alvepi)) and capillary endothelium (S(capendo)), can be estimated (see table 1
).
Pulmonary oedema
Typically, the development of pulmonary oedema follows a sequence of fluid accumulation in various compartments in the lung [22, 53, 54]. First, fluid appears in the connective tissue compartment around bronchi and larger blood vessels, the peribronchovascular space. Then, fluid enters the alveolar septal interstitium and, eventually, the alveolar space after the two interstitial compartments are filled (fig. 1
). As a global indicator of fluid accumulation, the lung wet/dry ratio is commonly used. However, this method does not give any information about the compartment in which oedema occurs. In contrast, a stereological approach allows for quantitative lung oedema analysis in its preserved microorganisation and location within the organ, as well as for the dissection of the particular contributions of peribronchovascular, septal and intra-alveolar oedema. This approach has been used successfully in various animal models of I/R injury, where it has been demonstrated that intra-alveolar oedema is the functionally most significant [42, 5557]. These studies have also shown that oedema assessment by stereology better reflects the functional status of the lung than does wet/dry ratio analysis.

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FIGURE 1. Light micrograph from a pig lung subjected to ischaemia/reperfusion injury. For details about the experiment conditions see [55]. Intra-alveolar oedema fluid (Oed) is partly filling alveolar lumina (Alv). Scale bar = 100 µm.
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Recommended parameters for the stereological analysis of pulmonary oedema are the total volume of oedema (V(oed, lung)) and volumes of intra-alveolar (V(alvoed, oed)), septal (V(sepoed, oed)) and peribronchovascular (V(pbvoed, oed)) oedema (table 1
).
Lung cell types
The number and mean size of a given cell type is essential information when hyperplasia and/or hypertrophy of these cells are to be quantitated, a typical case being type II alveolar epithelial cells in ALI (fig. 2
). This cell type is usually more resistant to injury than the type I cell [20, 23, 58] and serves as the progenitor cell for the regeneration of the adult alveolar epithelium [59]. It is, however, important to note that the stereological analysis of certain cell types can sometimes cause problems when pathological alterations, e.g. the occurrence of intermediate cells expressing both type I and type II cell markers during the regeneration of the alveolar epithelium after lung injury [60], make their classification difficult. After all, it is only possible to count what is identifiable [61].

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FIGURE 2. Transmission electron micrograph from a rat lung subjected to ischaemia/reperfusion injury. For details about the experimental conditions see [41, 42]. Three alveolar lumina can be seen, one of which is partly filled with protein-rich oedema fluid (Oed). The alveolar epithelial type II cell contains several lamellar bodies (LB). Intra-alveolar surfactant material (arrow) is present within oedema fluid. The bloodair barrier shows swellings of alveolar epithelial type I (Epi) and capillary endothelial (Endo) cells. Scale bar = 1 µm.
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Recommended parameters for the stereological analysis of the cellular composition of the alveolar septum are the total cell volume per lung (V(cell, lung)), the total cell number per lung (N(cell, lung)), the number-weighted mean cell volume (
N(cell)) and the volume-weighted mean cell volume (
V(cell)) (table 1
).
Bloodair barrier
The bloodair barrier has to face a bioengineering dilemma in that it has to be both thin and strong [62, 63]. According to Fick's law of diffusion, oxygen flow across a tissue barrier is directly proportional to the cross-sectional surface area and inversely proportional to the thickness of the barrier. The human lung, with an alveolar surface area of
140 m2 and a harmonic mean thickness of the bloodair barrier of
0.6 µm, is optimised in that respect [64]. Intra-alveolar and interstitial oedema, as well as oedematous swelling of the alveolar epithelium or capillary endothelium, increase the effective barrier thickness, thereby leading to decreased oxygenation in ALI.
The bloodair barrier consists of the alveolar epithelium, the capillary endothelium and the interstitium in between (fig. 2
). The alveolar epithelium is a mosaic of squamous type I cells that line
97% of the surface with their thin cell extensions and cuboidal type II cells. Type II cells have the following two main functions: 1) they serve as the cellular source of surfactant and 2) they contribute to the regeneration of the alveolar epithelium under normal and pathological conditions, such as ALI. The capillary endothelium is of the continuous (nonfenestrated) type. At the thin parts of the bloodair barrier, which constitutes over half of the total surface area, the interstitium is reduced to a fused epithelial and endothelial basal lamina. Stereological assessment of the thickness of the bloodair barrier components (alveolar epithelium, interstitium, capillary endothelium) and their degree of damage (normal, swollen, fragmented) has been performed in animal models of I/R injury [42, 55, 56].
Recommended parameters for the stereological analysis of the bloodair barrier (table 1
) are the arithmetic mean thickness of the bloodair barrier (
(bab)) and its constituents, the alveolar epithelium (
(epi)), the interstitium (
(int)), and the capillary endothelium (
(endo)). For assessment of the degree of damage, the parameters are the surface fractions of normal (SS(normal/...)), swollen (SS(swollen/...)) and fragmented (SS(fragmented/...)) alveolar epithelium (SS(.../alvepi)) and capillary endothelium (SS(.../capendo)), respectively.
Surfactant
The surfactant system has biophysical (surface tension reduction) and immunomodulatory functions that are essential for normal lung function [31, 6568]. Thus, surfactant keeps lung alveoli open, dry and clean. Surfactant is composed of
90% lipids, mainly saturated phosphatidylcholine, and
10% proteins, including the surfactant proteins (SP)-A, SP-B, SP-C and SP-D. Surfactant is also morphologically very complex. Different surfactant subtypes with a highly organised structure that can be distinguished morphologically (by electron microscopy) correspond to different stages in surfactant metabolism.
The alveolar epithelium is lined by a thin fluid layer. Surfactant functions in and on this layer. It is synthesised, stored, secreted and, to a large extent, recycled by type II alveolar epithelial cells [59, 69]. Therefore, an intracellular surfactant pool in type II cells and an intra-alveolar surfactant pool at the surface of the alveolar lining layer, as well as within its hypophase, can be distinguished (fig. 2
). Within type II cells, surfactant is stored in lamellar bodies [70, 71]. Surfactant material present in lamellar bodies is secreted into the alveolar lumen via exocytosis [72].
Intra-alveolar surfactant consists of several subtypes. After secretion, lamellar body-like forms transform into tubular myelin figures with a unique lattice-like structure. Tubular myelin is considered to be the immediate precursor of the surface film. "Spent" surfactant components are present in the hypophase as small unilamellar vesicles. The major route of surfactant clearance is re-uptake by type II cells. Within type II cells, surfactant material can be either recycled or degraded. Other routes of surfactant clearance include ingestion and lysosomal degradation by alveolar macrophages and clearance via the airways.
As mentioned previously, surfactant inhibition is one of the hallmark events in the pathophysiology of ALI [12, 28, 3234, 7375]. Therefore, surfactant analysis is essential when assessing ALI and, in principle, surfactant can be analysed in the following two ways.
Biochemical/biophysical surfactant analysis
Typically, surfactant analysis is based on material obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). This approach allows for biochemical (surfactant composition) and biophysical (surfactant function) analysis. In addition, several other components of the BAL material can be measured, e.g. the cellular composition or inflammatory cytokines. However, only the intra-alveolar surfactant compartment can be harvested by BAL and any topographical information is lost [67, 76]. Moreover, BAL and the isolation of surfactant material require strictly controlled conditions to avoid experimental error and to make results comparable [7779]. This is even more true in ALI, when analysis is further complicated by the presence of intra-alveolar oedema fluid in the BAL samples [80].
Morphological surfactant analysis
An alternative approach to analysing surfactant is by electron microscopy and stereology. It has the great advantage of allowing for the study of the intra-alveolar as well as the intracellular surfactant pool in its natural location and preserved microorganisation (fig. 2
) [81]. This approach is perfectly suited for experimental studies.
Analysis of intra-alveolar surfactant
After differential centrifugation of intra-alveolar surfactant material harvested by BAL, surface active large aggregates (LA), ultrastructurally predominantly corresponding to lamellar body-like forms and tubular myelin, and converted inactive small aggregates (SA), ultrastructurally predominantly corresponding to unilamellar vesicles, can be distinguished [28, 67, 82]. This correlation allows for the comparison of BAL and stereological data. Thus, surfactant inactivation in ALI can be expressed as an increase in the SA/LA ratio [28] or as an increase in unilamellar vesicles relative to lamellar body-like forms and tubular myelin. Stereological assessment of intra-alveolar surfactant has been performed in animal models of lung injury [4043]. I/R injury studies have shown that the amount of surface active tubular myelin correlates with post-ischaemic lung function [42] and that intra-alveolar surfactant alterations are independent from the presence of intra-alveolar oedema, therefore being not only a result but also a cause of intra-alveolar oedema formation [41]. This approach can also be used to analyse exogenous surfactant preparations (including their inactivation and its therapeutic prevention) in vitro [83].
Recommended parameters for the stereological analysis of intra-alveolar surfactant are surface fraction of alveolar epithelium covered with surfactant (SS(alvsurf/alvepi)), total intra-alveolar surfactant volume per lung (V(alvsurf, lung)), and volume fractions of its constituents, namely lamellar body-like forms (VV(lbl/alvsurf)), tubular myelin (VV(tm/alvsurf)), multilamellar vesicles (VV(mv/alvsurf)) and unilamellar vesicles (VV(uv/alvsurf)) (table 1
).
Analysis of intracellular surfactant
In the analysis of intracellular surfactant, lamellar bodies are seen as the morphological equivalent of the intracellular surfactant pool. This approach has been used in human lungs [84] and in various animal models [85, 86]. In I/R injury, intra-alveolar surfactant alterations, and thus a loss of surface-active surfactant forms in the alveoli, are associated with a decreased intracellular surfactant pool due to a decrease in the number of lamellar bodies per type II cell, indicating a compensatory increase in lamellar body secretion [85].
Recommended parameters for the stereological analysis of intracellular surfactant are the total lamellar body volume per lung (V(lb, lung)) and per type II cell (V(lb, type II)), number of lamellar bodies per type II cell (N(lb, type II)), number-weighted mean lamellar body size (
N(lb)) and volume-weighted mean lamellar body size
V(lb)) (table 1
).
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CONCLUSIONS
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Stereology is a set of accurate and efficient methods for the quantitative characterisation of the physical properties of biological objects based on sampling rules and microscopic measurements. It thus provides lung researchers with tools that are essential to obtain valid data for the quantitative assessment of the ultrastructural alterations that are seen in acute lung injury. Physician-scientists should be encouraged to apply stereology to better understand lung structure and function in health and disease and, finally, to find better treatment options for patients with lung diseases.
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Statement of interest
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The present work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG Oc-23/7-3 and Oc-23/8-1).
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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The author would like to acknowledge the cooperation of many friends and colleagues over the years, several of whom contributed to the present issue of the European Respiratory Review. Many thanks to B. Krieger for her help with the illustrations.
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