PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - DA Hughes AU - PL Haslam TI - Effect of smoking on the lipid composition of lung lining fluid and relationship between immunostimulatory lipids, inflammatory cells and foamy macrophages in extrinsic allergic alveolitis AID - 10.1183/09031936.93.03101128 DP - 1990 Nov 01 TA - European Respiratory Journal PG - 1128--1139 VI - 3 IP - 10 4099 - http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/3/10/1128.short 4100 - http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/3/10/1128.full SO - Eur Respir J1990 Nov 01; 3 AB - Normal lung lining fluid suppresses lymphoproliferative responses. This effect is mediated by the major phospholipid components, but minor lipid components can stimulate lymphocyte proliferation. The aim of this study was to discover whether the changes in lung lipid composition reported in patients with extrinsic allergic alveolitis (EAA) might influence the levels of lymphocytes which occur in the lungs of these patients. Since cigarette smokers are less susceptible to EAA, we also investigated the effect of smoking on the lipid composition of lung lining fluid. Lung lining fluid was sampled by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) from 15 patients with EAA, and 9 non-smokers and 13 smokers without lung disease. The smoking controls had increases in phosphatidylethanolamine, sphingomyelin and phosphatidylglycerol, but lower levels of cholesterol and cholesterol:total phospholipid ratios compared with the nonsmoking controls. By contrast, the patients with EAA had increases in total phospholipid and sphingomyelin; there were no smoking related decreases in cholesterol; and several patients had levels of cholesterol and cholesterol:total phospholipid ratios above the upper limit for the controls. In the BAL fluids of the EAA patients, the levels.ml-1 of the immunostimulatory lipids sphingomyelin, phosphatidylethanolamine, cholesterol and cholesterol esters correlated with the number.ml-1 of lymphocytes, mast cells, neutrophils and "foamy" macrophages. Cholesterol levels (rs = 0.82) and lymphocyte counts (rs = 0.90) correlated most closely with "foamy" macrophages (p less than 0.001), suggesting that uptake of cholesterol by macrophages may enhance antigen-presenting function. These observations provide some support for the hypothesis that inflammatory reactions in the lungs might be influenced by the local lipid environment.