• J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Mar 2001

    Percutaneous extracorporeal arteriovenous carbon dioxide removal improves survival in respiratory distress syndrome: a prospective randomized outcomes study in adult sheep.

    • J B Zwischenberger, S K Alpard, W Tao, D J Deyo, and A Bidani.
    • Department of Surgery, The University of Texas Medical Branch and Shriners Hospitals for Children, Galveston, Tex. 77555, USA. jzwische@utmb.edu
    • J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2001 Mar 1; 121 (3): 542-51.

    ObjectiveArteriovenous carbon dioxide removal (AVCO(2)R) uses a simple arteriovenous shunt for CO(2) removal to minimize barotrauma/volutrauma from mechanical ventilation. We performed a prospective randomized outcomes study of AVCO(2)R in our new, clinically relevant model of respiratory distress syndrome.MethodsAdult sheep (n = 18) received an LD(50) severe smoke inhalation and 40% third-degree burn. When respiratory distress syndrome developed (PaO (2)/FIO (2) < 200 at 40 to 48 hours), animals were randomized to the AVCO(2)R (n = 9) or sham group (n = 9) for 7 days. Ventilator management protocols mandated reductions in minute ventilation, first tidal volume to peak inspiratory pressure less than 30 cm H(2)O, then respiratory rate when PaCO (2) was less than 40 mm Hg. PaO (2) was kept above 60 mm Hg by adjusting FIO (2). When FIO (2) was 0.21, animals were weaned.ResultsThe study required 2946 animal-hours of critical care with 696 AVCO(2)R hours. One died in each group during model development. AVCO(2)R flow from 820 mL/min to 970 mL/min (11% to 14% cardiac output) removed CO(2) at a rate of 92 to 116 mL/min (mean 103 mL/min; 93%-97% of CO(2) production). Heart rate, mean arterial pressure, cardiac output, and pulmonary arterial wedge pressure remained relatively constant. Within 48 hours, AVCO(2)R allowed significant ventilator reductions versus baseline in the following measurements: tidal volume (420 to 270 mL), peak inspiratory pressure (25 to 14 cm H(2)O), minute ventilation (13 to 5 L/min), respiratory rate (26 to 16 breaths/min), and FIO (2) (0.88 to 0.35). Ventilator-free days with AVCO(2)R were 3.9 versus 0.2 (P <.01) for sham animals, and ventilator-dependent days with AVCO(2)R were 2.4 versus 6.2 (P <.01) for the 3 sham survivors. All 8 AVCO(2)R animals and 3 of 8 sham animals survived 7 days after randomization.ConclusionsPercutaneous AVCO(2)R achieved significant reduction in airway pressures, increased ventilator-free days, decreased ventilator-dependent days, and improved survival in a sheep model of respiratory distress syndrome.

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