| Literature DB >> 8863244 |
S J O'Toole1, H L Karamanoukian, A Sharma, F C Morin, B A Holm, R G Azizkhan, P L Glick.
Abstract
Surfactant therapy given before the onset of ventilation (surfactant prophylaxis) has been shown to improve oxygenation, ventilation, and pulmonary hemodynamics in the lamb model of congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH). The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of surfactant administered after the onset of ventilation ("surfactant rescue"). Ten lambs with surgically created CDH were instrumented, at full term, to measure pulmonary blood flow and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR). Catheters also were positioned for monitoring of systemic blood pressure and arterial blood gases. The animals were delivered and pressure-ventilated according to a standard protocol (PIP, 30 cm; PEEP, 4 cm; respiratory rate, 60 breaths per minute). After 30 minutes of ventilation, five animals received an intratracheal dose of calf lung surfactant extract (50 mg/kg). The animals were studied for 4 hours. Surfactant rescue had no discernible effect on Pco2, Pco2, or pH. There was an increase in pulmonary blood flow, but it was not significant. The dramatic improvement in oxygenation, ventilation, and pulmonary blood flow found with prophylactic surfactant cannot be reproduced when surfactant is administered as rescue therapy. This indicates that the surfactant is not being delivered adequately, the lungs have already incurred significant barotrauma, and/or the surfactant is being inactivated by alveolar protein. Therefore, the authors suggest that when exogenous surfactant therapy is being considered for the fetus or newborn with CDH, it should be administered as early as possible, preferably before the infant's first breath. Prenatal diagnosis and delivery in a tertiary care center would facilitate this optimum management.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8863244 DOI: 10.1016/s0022-3468(96)90097-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pediatr Surg ISSN: 0022-3468 Impact factor: 2.545