Articles: extravascular-lung-water.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Priming of cardiopulmonary bypass with human albumin or Ringer lactate: effect on colloid osmotic pressure and extravascular lung water.
We have undertaken a randomized study on 20 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery in order to determine the influence of cardiopulmonary pump prime solutions on colloid osmotic pressure and extravascular lung water. Crystalloid priming with Ringer lactate was compared with an albumin solution of nearly physiological colloid osmotic composition (4%). ⋯ The more pronounced decrease in colloid osmotic pressure and in transcapillary gradient (difference between colloid osmotic pressure and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure) in the Ringer lactate group was associated with a significant increase in extravascular lung water (by 60%) in the postoperative period; the human albumin group, however, showed only a slight tendency to increased lung water. There were no differences in haemodynamic or respiratory states after operation.
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In this report, we evaluated and discussed the accuracy and the clinical problems involved in measurements of extravascular lung water volume (EVLW), using the thermal-sodium double indicator dilution technique. We measured EVLW in 2 groups, group I (normal cardiac function group) consisting of 20 patients with esophageal cancer, and group II (low cardiac function group) consisting of 27 patients with heart valvular disease. No significant difference was found between the two groups in the reproducibility (SDM/Average X 100) of measurements of Cardiac output (CO), MTT (Mean Transient Time), and EVLW. ⋯ We thought that EVLW should be calculated using the CO measured with Swan-Ganz catheter in cases of low cardiac function. Infection, thromboembolism and bleeding after the insertion of the catheter, overload of water and sodium due to the injection of the indicator were thought to be complications of measurement of EVLW. But in our clinical cases there was no such complication.
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Comparative Study
Influence of ultrafiltration/hemofiltration on extravascular lung water.
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Anasth Intensivther Notfallmed · Dec 1990
[The measurement of extravascular lung water--significant in the follow-up of ARDS?].
In 40 adult patients suffering from severe ARDS stage III and IV (Morel) we examined the course of the extravascular lung water (EVLW) measured by the double indicator dilution method with 858 single measurements, during mechanical ventilation with PEEP, or extracorporeal CO2 elimination (ECCO2 R). No correlation could be found between EVLW and the values of alveolar arterial oxygen difference (AaDO2) and intrapulmonary right-left shunt (Qs/Qt) or haemodynamic values such as CVP, PCWP, mean pulmonary arterial pressure, or the 24 h fluid balance. It was, therefore, not possible to estimate a prognostic trend based on a single measurement of EVLW. ⋯ However, during the ECCO2-R treatment the repeated estimation of EVLW and AaDO2 is a useful tool to assess recovery because other parameters such as Qs/Qt and chest computer tomography during long-term bypass are very difficult or impossible to employ for this purpose. A change of EVLW with increasing PEEP level could not be found. The reproducibility of 858 EVLW values was excellent with a coefficient of variation of 4.9 +/- 3.5%.
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Nov 1990
Effect of pentoxifylline on hemodynamics, alveolar fluid reabsorption, and pulmonary edema in a model of acute lung injury.
We investigated the effect of pentoxifylline (PTX) on the development of pulmonary edema in a model of adult respiratory distress syndrome in rabbits. Lung injury was induced by repeated saline lavages in adult rabbits weighing 2.5 to 3.5 kg. Rabbits pretreated with PTX (20 mg/kg bolus followed by 20 mg/kg/h infusion) developed significantly lower amounts of lung edema 4 h after saline lavage (extravascular lung water to dry weight ratio [W/D], 6.9 +/- 0.6 SD versus 8.9 +/- 0.5 in control animals). ⋯ To determine if PTX decreased lung water by accelerating active alveolar fluid reabsorption, a single 60-ml aliquot of saline was instilled into the lungs of normal rabbits treated with saline or PTX. Both groups had a similar decrease in lung water content 1 and 4 h later. Our data indicate that PTX reduces edema formation in rabbits after saline lavage, not by lowering microvascular pressures for fluid filtration or by acceleration alveolar fluid reabsorption, but possibly by its anti-inflammatory effect on neutrophil function.