• Pediatric research · Nov 1993

    How to ventilate lungs as small as 12.5% of normal: the new technique of intratracheal pulmonary ventilation.

    • E E Müller, T Kolobow, S Mandava, M Jones, G Vitale, M Aprigliano, and K Yamada.
    • Section on Pulmonary and Cardiac Assist Devices, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
    • Pediatr. Res. 1993 Nov 1; 34 (5): 606-10.

    AbstractWe wished to determine in a laboratory animal model how much residual lung was needed to sustain total gas exchange. In a series of young, healthy lambs weighing approximately 10 kg that were sedated and paralyzed, we progressively excluded from gas exchange all the left lung (a total of 43%), plus the right lower and cardiac lobes (81%), plus the right middle lobe (87.5%). In some studies, the respective lobes were surgically removed; in others, the bronchi and the pulmonary arteries to the respective lobes were ligated. We provided pulmonary ventilation using the pressure control mode (Servo 900 C) at a tidal volume of 20 mL/kg multiplied by the fraction of the remaining lungs, a respiratory rate up to 120/min, a peak inspiratory pressure of 12-15 cm H2O, and a positive end-expiratory pressure of 3 cm H2O. Those lambs with at least both the right upper lobe (RUL) and right middle lobe remaining (19% of total lungs) were weaned to room air on mechanical ventilation within 48 h. Ventilating RUL (12.5% of remaining lung) with the same ventilator required a substantially higher tidal volume and peak inspiratory pressure to result in adequate alveolar ventilation but led to respiratory failure and death within 8 h. We then applied a newly developed system of intratracheal pulmonary ventilation to ventilate the RUL (12.5% of remaining lung) alone. A continuous flow of humidified mixture of air and oxygen was directly passed into the trachea at the level of the carina through a diffuser at a tidal volume of 2.5 mL/kg. A single valve controlled expiration and respiratory rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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