Literature DB >> 11098391

A perfluorochemical loss/restoration (L/R) system for tidal liquid ventilation.

R Libros1, C M Philips, M R Wolfson, T H Shaffer.   

Abstract

Tidal liquid ventilation is the transport of dissolved respiratory gases via volume exchange of perfluorochemical (PFC) liquid to and from the PFC-filled lung. All gas-liquid surface tension is eliminated, increasing compliance and providing lung protection due to lower inflation pressures. Tidal liquid ventilation is achieved by cycling fluid from a reservoir to and from the lung by a ventilator. Current approaches are microprocessor-based with feedback control. During inspiration, warmed oxygenated PFC liquid is pumped from a fluid reservoir/gas exchanger into the lung. PFC fluid is conserved by condensing (60-80% efficiency) vapor in the expired gas. A feedback-control system was developed to automatically replace PFC lost due to condenser inefficiency. This loss/restoration (L/R) system consists of a PFC-vapor thermal detector (+/- 2.5%), pneumatics, amplifiers, a gas flow detector (+/- 1%), a PFC pump (+/- 5%), and a controller. Gravimetric studies of perflubron loss from a flask due to evaporation were compared with experimental L/R results and found to be within +/- 1.4%. In addition, when L/R studies were conducted with a previously reported liquid ventilation system over a four-hour period, the L/R system maintained system perflubron volume to within +/- 1% of prime volume and 11.5% of replacement volume, and the difference between experimental PFC loss and that of the L/R system was 1.8 mL/hr. These studies suggest that the PFC L/R system may have significant economic (appropriate dosing for PFC loss) as well as physiologic (maintenance of PFC inventory in the lungs and liquid ventilator) impact on liquid ventilation procedures.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11098391

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Instrum Technol        ISSN: 0899-8205


  1 in total

1.  Total liquid ventilation provides superior respiratory support to conventional mechanical ventilation in a large animal model of severe respiratory failure.

Authors:  Joshua R Pohlmann; David O Brant; Morgan A Daul; Junewai L Reoma; Anne C Kim; Kathryn R Osterholzer; Kent J Johnson; Robert H Bartlett; Keith E Cook; Ronald B Hirschl
Journal:  ASAIO J       Date:  2011 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.872

  1 in total

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