• J Trauma Acute Care Surg · Jan 2014

    Advantages and pitfalls of combining intravenous antithrombin with nebulized heparin and tissue plasminogen activator in acute respiratory distress syndrome.

    • Sebastian Rehberg, Yusuke Yamamoto, Linda E Sousse, Collette Jonkam, Robert A Cox, Donald S Prough, and Perenlei Enkhbaatar.
    • From the Investigational Intensive Care Unit (S.R., Y.Y., L.E.S., C.J., D.S.P., P.E.), Department of Anesthesiology, and Department of Pathology (R.A.C.), The University of Texas Medical Branch; and Shriners Hospital for Children (R.A.C., P.E.), Galveston, Texas; and Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine (S.R.), University of Muenster, Muenster, Germany.
    • J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2014 Jan 1;76(1):126-33.

    BackgroundPulmonary coagulopathy has become an important therapeutic target in adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). We hypothesized that combining intravenous recombinant human antithrombin (rhAT), nebulized heparin, and nebulized tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) more effectively improves pulmonary gas exchange compared with a single rhAT infusion, while maintaining the anti-inflammatory properties of rhAT in ARDS. Therefore, the present prospective, randomized experiment was conducted using an established ovine model.MethodsFollowing burn and smoke inhalation injury (40% of total body surface area, third-degree flame burn, and 4 × 12 breaths of cold cotton smoke), 18 chronically instrumented sheep were randomly assigned to receive intravenous saline plus saline nebulization (control), intravenous rhAT (6 IU/kg/h) started 1 hour after injury plus saline nebulization (AT i.v.) or intravenous rhAT combined with nebulized heparin (10,000 IU every 4 hours, started 2 hours after injury), and nebulized TPA (2 mg every 4 hours, started 4 hours after injury) (triple therapy, n = 6 each). All animals were mechanically ventilated and fluid resuscitated according to standard protocols during the 48-hour study period.ResultsBoth treatment approaches attenuated ARDS compared with control animals. Notably, triple therapy was associated with an improved PaO2/FiO2 ratio (p = 0.007), attenuated pulmonary obstruction (p = 0.02) and shunting (p = 0.025), as well as reduced ventilatory pressures (p < 0.05 each) versus AT i.v. at 48 hours. However, the anti-inflammatory effects of sole AT i.v., namely, the inhibition of neutrophil activation (neutrophil count in the lymph and pulmonary polymorphonuclear cells, p < 0.05 vs. control each), pulmonary transvascular fluid flux (lymph flow, p = 0.004 vs. control), and systemic vascular leakage (cumulative net fluid balance, p < 0.001 vs. control), were abolished in the triple therapy group.ConclusionCombining intravenous rhAT with nebulized heparin and nebulized TPA more effectively restores pulmonary gas exchange, but the anti-inflammatory effects of sole rhAT are abolished with the triple therapy. Interferences between the different anticoagulants may represent a potential explanation for these findings.

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