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Critical care medicine · Jun 2001
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialPartial liquid ventilation in severely surfactant-depleted, spontaneously breathing rabbits supported by proportional assist ventilation.
- U H Thome, A Schulze, R Schnabel, A R Franz, F Pohlandt, and H D Hummler.
- Division of Neonatology and Pediatric Critical Care, University Children's Hospital, 89070 Ulm, Germany.
- Crit. Care Med. 2001 Jun 1;29(6):1175-80.
ObjectiveWe hypothesized that partial liquid ventilation (PLV) would improve oxygenation in nonparalyzed, surfactant-deficient rabbits breathing spontaneously while supported by proportional assist ventilation (PAV). This ventilation mode compensates for low pulmonary compliance and high resistance and thereby facilitates spontaneous breathing.DesignRandomized trial.SettingUniversity animal research facility.SubjectsTwenty-six anesthetized New Zealand white rabbits weighing 2592 +/- 237g (mean +/- sd).InterventionsAfter pulmonary lavage (target Pao2 <100 mm Hg on mechanical ventilation with 6 cm H2O of positive end-expiratory pressure [PEEP] and an Fio2 of 1.0), rabbits were randomized to PAV (PEEP of 8 cm H2O) with or without PLV. PLV rabbits received 25 mL/kg of perfluorocarbon by intratracheal infusion (1 mL/kg/min). Pao2, Paco2, tidal volume, respiratory rate, minute ventilation, mean airway pressure, arterial blood pressure, heart rate, pulmonary compliance, and airway resistance were measured. Evaporated perfluorocarbon was refilled every 30 mins in PLV animals. After 5 hrs, animals were killed and lungs were removed. Lung injury was evaluated using a histologic score.Main ResultsPao2 and compliance were significantly higher in PLV rabbits compared with controls (p <.05, analysis of variance for repeated measures). All other parameters were similar in both groups.ConclusionsPLV improved oxygenation and pulmonary compliance in spontaneously breathing, severely surfactant-depleted rabbits supported by PAV. The severity of lung injury by histology was unaffected.
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