Alterations to pulmonary surfactant structure, composition, and function contribute to the severity of respiratory infections. Analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) from children undergoing diagnostic bronchoscopy for structural abnormalities (control group, n = 24), asthma (n = 18), lung infection (n = 30), and cystic fibrosis (CF, n = 15) showed that BALF phospholipid concentration decreased with age for the control group and was elevated in all disease groups. The fractional concentration of the major surface active component, dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (PC16:0/16:0), correlated (r(2) = 0.608, P < 0.01) with airway resistance (FEV(1%) predicted), and decreased PC16:0/16:0 was accompanied by increased concentrations of phospholipid components characteristic of cell membranes (PC16:0/18:1 and PI18:0/20:4). Median minimal surface tension, measured by pulsating bubble surfactometer, was elevated (P < 0.01) in both infection (17.5 mN/m) and CF (17.1 mN/m) compared with the control group (1.5 mN/m). Centrifugation (60,000 x g, 40 min) of BALF indicated that infection was accompanied by accumulation of large aggregate forms of surfactant, in contrast to previous reports of increased conversion to inactive small aggregate surfactant particles in ventilated patients with respiratory failure. This accumulation of surface-inactive, large aggregate forms of surfactant, possibly due to mixing with membrane material from inflammatory cells, may contribute to severity of lung disease in children with respiratory infections.