| Literature DB >> 7472977 |
D Major1, M Cadenas, R Cloutier, L Fournier, M R Wolfson, T H Shaffer.
Abstract
Tracheal instillation of perfluorochemical liquid (PFC) lowers surface tension in the lung and thus might reduce barotrauma commonly associated with conventional gas ventilation (GV) in highly immature and hypoplastic lungs. It could be a promising alternative treatment for congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) when GV alone is proving inefficient. The authors compared data for eight newborn lambs with surgically induced CDH. The animals had GV and were studied (in 2 groups) for up to 3.5 hours. Group 1 (GV, n = 4) had gas ventilation only. In group 2 (PFC, n = 4), after 30 minutes of GV, 10 to 12 mL/kg of warmed, oxygenated PFC liquid (LiquiVent) was instilled into the lung via the trachea under pressure-volume curve monitoring. Arterial pressure, blood chemistry, and pulmonary mechanics were evaluated serially; histological analysis was performed. One preassigned animal in group 1 died after 15 minutes. After 30 minutes of life, the cardiopulmonary profile of survivors was indicative of severe respiratory distress (Pao2 < 72 mm Hg with FIO2 at 1.0, PaCO2 > 90 mm Hg, compliance < 0.10 mL/cm H2O/kg) and not different between groups; the severity of pulmonary hypoplasia was further confirmed postmortem; the ratio of lung weight to body weight was 41% of that observed in control lambs, in both gas-only and combined gas/PFC-ventilated animals, compared with their respective controls. After instillation of PFC, there were dramatic improvements in acid-base status and pulmonary compliance in group 2. Survival at 3.5 hours also was markedly different (4 of 4 PFC animals and 1 of 3 GV animals).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
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Year: 1995 PMID: 7472977 DOI: 10.1016/0022-3468(95)90016-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pediatr Surg ISSN: 0022-3468 Impact factor: 2.545