Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Partial liquid ventilation with low-dose perfluorochemical and high-frequency oscillation improves oxygenation and lung compliance in a rabbit model of surfactant depletion.

BACKGROUND: Partial liquid ventilation (PLV) with perfluorochemical (PFC) has been advocated as a new therapy for acute respiratory distress syndrome in both clinical and animal studies, meconium aspiration syndrome, and RDS. PFC is referred to as liquid PEEP because it gets distributed to the most gravity-dependent regions of the lung due to its density. High-frequency oscillation (HFO) has been shown to prevent both acute and chronic lung injury in the management of very low birth weight infants with RDS, with gentle ventilation approach. Specifically, HFO with aggressive and adequate lung volume recruitment has been shown to reduce the incidence of chronic lung disease in very low birth weight infants. We hypothesized that PLV along with HFO might be effective in ARDS in an adult rabbit model.

OBJECTIVES: To examine the efficiency of low-dose PLV with with HFO on pulmonary gas exchange and lung compliance in a surfactant-depleted rabbit model.

METHODS: After induction of severe lung injury by repeated saline lung lavage, 19 adult white Japanese rabbits were randomized into two groups that received PLV with HFO (n=9) or HFO gas ventilation (n=10). Physiological and blood gas data were compared between the two groups by analysis of variance.

RESULTS: The HFO-PLV group showed improved total lung compliance with maintenance of significantly lower mean airway pressure as compared with the HFO-GAS group so as to keep SpO2>90%.

CONCLUSIONS: The addition of a low dose of PFC with HFO was effective in achieving adequate oxygenation, with a reduction in further lung injury in neonates.

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