| Literature DB >> 22262977 |
Kristen Tropea1, Helen Christou.
Abstract
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is a major complication of preterm birth and has serious adverse long-term health consequences. The etiology of BPD is complex, multifactorial, and incompletely understood. Contributing factors include ventilator-induced lung injury, exposure to toxic oxygen levels, and infection. Several preventive and therapeutic strategies have been developed with variable success. These include lung protective ventilator strategies and pharmacological and nutritional interventions. These strategies target different components and stages of the disease process and they are commonly used in combination. The purpose of this review is to discuss the evidence for current pharmacological interventions and identify future therapeutic modalities that appear promising in the prevention and management of BPD. Continued improved understanding of BPD pathogenesis leads to opportunities for newer preventive approaches. These will need to be evaluated in the setting of current clinical practice in order to assess their efficacy.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22262977 PMCID: PMC3259479 DOI: 10.1155/2012/598606
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Pharmacological interventions for prevention and management of BPD.
| Class of drugs | Presumed mechanism | Main clinical responses | Major side effects | Recommended use in BPD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caffeine | Apnea of prematurity Unknown | Reduction in days of positive pressure ventilation, reduction in BPD, lower incidence of neurodevelopmental impairment | Transient decrease in weight gain | Recommended for treatment of apnea of prematurity and prevention of BPD |
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| Diuretics | Pulmonary Edema | Decreased pulmonary edema | Electrolyte imbalance, osteopenia, ototoxicity |
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| Bronchodilators | Bronchospasm | Bronchodilation | Tachycardia, arrhythmias | Limit use in infants with bronchospasm and acute clinical response |
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| Steroids | Inflammation | Improved oxygenation, earlier extubation | Short term: hyperglycemia, hypertension, GI perforation | Last resort therapy for rapidly deteriorating pulmonary status |
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| Mast cell stabilizer | Inflammation | No clinical benefit | None reported | Not for routine use |
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| Vitamin A | Impaired lung development | Small reduction in incidence of BPD | None reported | Recommended in infants <1000 grams |
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| Inositol | Impaired lung growth | Decreased incidence of BPD | None reported | Not for routine use |
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| Antioxidants | Oxidant injury | Delayed benefit from SOD | None reported | Not for routine use |
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| Inhaled NO | Inflammation Oxidant stress Unknown | Possibly beneficial in reducing BPD but optimal timing, dose and duration unknown | IVH in infants <1000 g with early rescue use | Not for routine or rescue use |
Modified from Baveja and Christou [10].