• Critical care medicine · Jul 2008

    Sustained hypercapnic acidosis during pulmonary infection increases bacterial load and worsens lung injury.

    • Donall F O'Croinin, Alistair D Nichol, Natalie Hopkins, John Boylan, Sorca O'Brien, Clare O'Connor, John G Laffey, and Paul McLoughlin.
    • School of Medicine and Medical Sciences, Conway Institute, University College Dublin, Ireland.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2008 Jul 1;36(7):2128-35.

    ObjectiveHypercapnic acidosis is commonly permitted in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome during the use of protective ventilation strategies. Hypercapnic acidosis is also a common complication of multiple lung diseases and is associated with a poor prognosis, although the mechanisms by which it leads to increased mortality is not known. Previous studies using noninfective models of lung injury show that acute (<6 hrs) hypercapnic acidosis reduced lung damage by an anti-inflammatory effect. We hypothesized that this anti-inflammatory effect would be detrimental in vivo in the presence of untreated bacterial infection and sustained hypercapnia (>48 hrs) and, furthermore, that if bacterial reproduction were controlled by antibiotic therapy, then the anti-inflammatory effects of hypercapnic acidosis would no longer prove detrimental.DesignThis study was a prospective, randomized animal study.SettingThis study was conducted at a university research laboratory.SubjectsStudy subjects were adult male Wistar-Kyoto rats.InterventionsAfter intratracheal instillation of Escherichia coli under general anesthesia, rats were housed in normocapnic (21% O2, 0% CO2) or hypercapnic (21% O2, 5% CO2) environments for 2 days. Rats were then reanesthetized for assessment of physiological and quantitative stereologic indices of lung damage, quantitative bacterial counts, and neutrophil phagocytosis.Measurements And Main ResultsHypercapnic acidosis was associated with higher lung bacterial colony counts, more structural damage, and lower static lung compliance than normocapnia. Neutrophils isolated from hypercapnic rats demonstrated impaired phagocytosis. In a further separate series of experiments, in which rats were given antibiotic therapy, lung damage was not different between normocapnic and hypercapnic acidosis groups.ConclusionsProlonged hypercapnic acidosis worsened bacterial infection-induced lung injury. Our findings suggest an immunosuppressive effect of hypercapnic acidosis and have important implications for protective ventilation strategies that permit hypercapnic acidosis in patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome and in the management of hypercapnic acidosis during infective exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other lung diseases.

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