• Intensive care medicine · Dec 1996

    Comparative Study

    Pressure-limited ventilation with permissive hypercapnia and minimum PEEP in saline-lavaged rabbits allows progressive improvement in oxygenation, but does not avoid ventilator-induced lung injury.

    • K G Hickling, I G Town, M Epton, A Neill, A Tie, M Whitehead, P Graham, E Everest, G A'Court, B Darlow, and K Laubscher.
    • Department of Intensive Care, Christchurch Hospital, New Zealand.
    • Intensive Care Med. 1996 Dec 1;22(12):1445-52.

    ObjectiveTo determine whether pressure-limited intermittent mandatory ventilation with permissive hypercapnia and positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) titrated to arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) prevents or reduces acute lung injury, compared to conventional ventilation, in saline-lavaged rabbits.DesignProspective randomised trial.SettingUniversity animal laboratory.Subjects18 New Zealand White rabbits.InterventionsFollowing five sequential saline lung lavages, anaesthetised rabbits were randomly allocated in pairs to receive either of two ventilation protocols using intermittent mandatory ventilation. The study group had peak inspiratory pressure limited to 15 cm H2O and arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PaCO2) was allowed to rise. The control group received 12 ml/kg tidal volume with rate adjusted for normocarbia. PEEP and fractional inspired oxygen (FIO2) were adjusted to maintain, PaO2 between 8 and 13.3 kPa (60 and 100 mm Hg) using a predetermined protocol. At 10 h or following death, lung lavage was repeated and lung histology evaluated.Measurements And Main ResultsThe mean increase in lavage cell counts and protein concentration and hyaline membrane scores were not significantly different between the groups. Oxygenation progressively improved more in the study group (p = 0.01 vs control for PaO2/FIO2 ratio and alveolar-arterial oxygen tension gradient (AaDO2)). PEEP was similar and the mean airway pressure higher in the control group, suggesting that this probably resulted from less ventilator-induced injury in the study group. Four deaths occurred in the control group (three due to pneumothorax and one to hypoxaemia) and none in the study group (p = 0.08).ConclusionsThis ventilatory protocol may have failed to prevent lung overdistension or it may have provided insufficient PEEP to prevent injury in this model; PEEP greater than the lower inflection point of the pressure-volume curve has been shown to prevent injury almost entirely.

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