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Pediatr Crit Care Me · Sep 2007
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudySelective medicated (normal saline and exogenous surfactant) bronchoalveolar lavage in severe aspiration syndrome in children.
- Giuseppe A Marraro, Marco Luchetti, Claudio Spada, Elena Galassini, Massimo Giossi, and Alessandro Monici Preti Piero.
- Anesthesia and Intensive Care Department, Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Fatebenefratelli and Ophtalmiatric Hospital, Milan, Italy. gmarraro@picu.it
- Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2007 Sep 1;8(5):476-81.
ObjectiveTo study the ability of volume-controlled ventilation and medicated (normal saline plus surfactant) bronchoalveolar lavage in aspiration to reduce the duration of intubation and improve gas exchange.Design: Randomized controlled clinical trial.SettingPediatric intensive care unit.PatientsTwenty children, 1 month to 16 yrs old, who were intubated and mechanically ventilated, were randomized within 6 hrs of aspiration to receive volume-controlled ventilation plus medicated bronchoalveolar lavage (treatment group) or the same ventilation and bronchosuction (control group).InterventionsVolume-controlled ventilation and positive end-expiratory pressure (10-12 cm H2O) were applied. Medicated bronchoalveolar lavage was performed using five aliquots of 5 mL of saline plus 10 mg/mL Curosurf (porcine surfactant, Chiesi Pharmaceutical SpA, Parma, Italy) in infants, five boluses of 10 mL of saline plus 5 mg/mL Curosurf in children, and four boluses of 25 mL of saline with 2.4 mg/mL Curosurf in adolescents for each affected lobe. One hour after bronchoalveolar lavage, 240 mg of Curosurf was administered locally.Measurements And Main ResultsAll patients survived. In the treatment group, days of intubation were 4.6 (+/-1.07), oxygenation index and Pao2/Fio2 improved significantly at 24 hrs, and statistical reduction in tidal volume mL/kg was observed from 36 hrs. In the control group, days of intubation were 11.8 (+/-3.22) (p < .0001), no improvement in oxygenation was noted, and pneumonia was observed in seven children (70%).ConclusionsEven though this was an unblinded small clinical trial and low tidal volume strategy was not employed at an early stage after lung injury, there is some evidence that bronchoalveolar lavage with normal saline and surfactant may have clinical value in treating severe aspiration syndrome in children. More clinical studies are warranted to overcome study limitations and potential bias.
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