| Literature DB >> 24918030 |
Frans J Walther1, José M Hernández-Juviel2, Alan J Waring3.
Abstract
Background. Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) is a widely accepted technique of non-invasive respiratory support in premature infants with respiratory distress syndrome due to lack of lung surfactant. If this approach fails, the next step is often intubation, mechanical ventilation (MV) and intratracheal instillation of clinical lung surfactant. Objective. To investigate whether aerosol delivery of advanced synthetic lung surfactant, consisting of peptide mimics of surfactant proteins B and C (SP-B and SP-C) and synthetic lipids, during nCPAP improves lung function in surfactant-deficient rabbits. Methods. Experimental synthetic lung surfactants were produced by formulating 3% Super Mini-B peptide (SMB surfactant), a highly surface active SP-B mimic, and a combination of 1.5% SMB and 1.5% of the SP-C mimic SP-Css ion-lock 1 (BC surfactant), with a synthetic lipid mixture. After testing aerosol generation using a vibrating membrane nebulizer and aerosol conditioning (particle size, surfactant composition and surface activity), we investigated the effects of aerosol delivery of synthetic SMB and BC surfactant preparations on oxygenation and lung compliance in saline-lavaged, surfactant-deficient rabbits, supported with either nCPAP or MV. Results. Particle size distribution of the surfactant aerosols was within the 1-3 µm distribution range and surfactant activity was not affected by aerosolization. At a dose equivalent to clinical surfactant therapy in premature infants (100 mg/kg), aerosol delivery of both synthetic surfactant preparations led to a quick and clinically relevant improvement in oxygenation and lung compliance in the rabbits. Lung function recovered to a greater extent in rabbits supported with MV than with nCPAP. BC surfactant outperformed SMB surfactant in improving lung function and was associated with higher phospholipid values in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; these findings were irrespective of the type of ventilatory support (nCPAP or MV) used. Conclusions. Aerosol delivery of synthetic lung surfactant with a combination of highly active second generation SP-B and SP-C mimics was effective as a therapeutic approach towards relieving surfactant deficiency in spontaneously breathing rabbits supported with nCPAP. To obtain similar results with nCPAP as with intratracheal instillation, higher dosage of synthetic surfactant and reduction of its retention by the delivery circuit will be needed to increase the lung dose.Entities:
Keywords: Aerosol delivery; Captive bubble surfactometry; Lung function; Mechanical ventilation; Nasal continuous positive airway pressure; Surfactant protein B; Surfactant protein C; Surfactant-deficient rabbits; Synthetic lung surfactant
Year: 2014 PMID: 24918030 PMCID: PMC4045332 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Nebulizer residue and delivery at the tip of the nasopharyngeal prongs of surfactant aerosol.
The delivery of the experimental surfactant preparations and synthetic lipids at the tip of the nasopharyngeal prongs was calculated as the percentage of the surfactant dose placed in the holding chamber of the nebulizer that was recovered at the distal end of the nasopharyngeal prongs. Data are expressed as mean ± SD % of n = 4.
| Surfactant | Nebulizer residue | Delivery at the tip of the |
|---|---|---|
| Synthetic lipids alone | 10.5 ± 3.8 % | 50.5 ± 15.9 % |
| SMB surfactant | 4.7 ± 2.1 % | 55.2 ± 14.2 % |
| BC surfactant | 24.4 ± 5.3 % | 39.6 ± 3.2 % |
| Infasurf | 36.2 ± 7.0 % | 32.6 ± 6.3 % |
Figure 1Oxygenation and dynamic compliance.
Mean ± SEM of arterial PO2 (mm Hg) values, as a measure of oxygenation, and dynamic compliance (ml/kg/cm H2O) values, as a measure of lung function, in 22 saline-lavaged rabbits that received a modular dose (amount placed into the nebulizer) of 100 mg/kg of aerosolized synthetic SMB or BC surfactant or Infasurf during nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP: SMB n = 6, BC n = 4, Infasurf n = 2) or mechanical ventilation (MV: SMB n = 6, BC n = 4). Surfactant aerosol delivery was completed at time 0 min (arrow).
Protein and phospholipid content of bronchoalveolar lavages.
Mean ± SEM protein and phospholipid values (µg/ml) in pre- and post-surfactant treatment bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluids.
| Protein (µg/ml) | Phospholipids (µg/ml) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surfactant–ventilation | Pre-treatment | Post-treatment | Pre-treatment | Post-treatment |
| SMB-nCPAP | 358 ± 96 | 1,796 ± 431 | 45 ± 22 | 357 ± 147 |
| SMB-MV | 296 ± 42 | 1,394 ± 259 | 9 ± 1 | 437 ± 100 |
| BC-nCPAP | 368 ± 58 | 1,731 ± 283 | 33 ± 18 | 1,281 ± 172 |
| BC-MV | 354 ± 54 | 1,092 ± 139 | 34 ± 13 | 1,061 ± 157 |
Notes.
p < 0.001 vs pre-treatment values.
p < 0.02 vs post-treatment SMB surfactant.