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  4. An individualized approach to sustained inflation duration at birth improves outcomes in newborn preterm lambs
 
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2015
Journal Article
Titel

An individualized approach to sustained inflation duration at birth improves outcomes in newborn preterm lambs

Abstract
A sustained first inflation (SI) at birth may aid lung liquid clearance and aeration, but the impact of SI duration relative to the volume-response of the lung is poorly understood. We compared three SI strategies: 1) variable duration defined by attaining volume equilibrium using real-time electrical impedance tomography (EIT; SIplat); 2) 30 s beyond equilibrium (SIlong); 3) short 30-s SI (SI30); and 4) positive pressure ventilation without SI (no-SI) on spatiotemporal aeration and ventilation (EIT), gas exchange, lung mechanics, and regional early markers of injury in preterm lambs. Fifty-nine fetal-instrumented lambs were ventilated for 60 min after applying the allocated first inflation strategy. At study completion molecular and histological markers of lung injury were analyzed. The time to SI volume equilibrium, and resultant volume, were highly variable; mean (SD) 55 (34) s, coefficient of variability 59%. SIplat and SIlong resulted in better lung mechanics, gas exchange and lower ventilator settings than both no-SI and SI30. At 60 min, alveolar-arterial difference in oxygen was a mean (95% confidence interval) 130 (13, 249) higher in SI30 vs. SIlong group (two-way ANOVA). These differences were due to better spatiotemporal aeration and tidal ventilation, although all groups showed redistribution of aeration towards the nondependent lung by 60 min. Histological lung injury scores mirrored spatiotemporal change in aeration and were greatest in SI30 group (P < 0.01, Kruskal-Wallis test). An individualized volume-response approach to SI was effective in optimizing aeration, homogeneous tidal ventilation, and respiratory outcomes, while an inadequate SI duration had no benefit over positive pressure ventilation alone.
Author(s)
Tingay, David Gerald
University of Melbourne, Department of Pediatrics, Parkville, Australia
Lavizzari, Anna
Universita degli Studi di Milano, Department of Clinical Sciences and Community
Zonneveld, Cornelis Elroy E.
Murdoch Children Research Institute, Neonatal Research, Melbourne, Australia
Rajapaksa, Anushi E.
Murdoch Children Research Institute, Neonatal Research, Melbourne, Australia
Zannin, Emanuela
Politecnico di Milano, Department of Electronics, Milan, Italy
Perkins, Elizabeth Jean
Murdoch Children Research Institute, Neonatal Research, Melbourne, Australia
Black, Don
Murdoch Children Research Institute, Neonatal Research, Melbourne, Australia
Sourial, Magdy
Murdoch Children Research Institute, Neonatal Research, Melbourne, Australia
Dellacà, Raffaele L.
Politecnico di Milano, Department of Electronics, Milan, Italy
Mosca, Fabio A.
Universita degli Studi di Milano, Department of Clinical Sciences and Community
Adler, Andy
Carleton University <Ottawa> / Systems and Computer Engineering
Grychtol, Bartlomiej
Frerichs, Inéz
University Medical Center of Schleswig-Holstein <Kiel> / Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine
Davis, Peter Graham Raham
Royal Women's Hospital, Carlton, Neonatal Research, Carlton, Australia
Zeitschrift
American journal of physiology. L, Lung cellular and molecular physiology
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DOI
10.1152/ajplung.00277.2015
Language
English
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