• Critical care medicine · Jan 1995

    Development and application of a simplified liquid ventilator.

    • R B Hirschl, S I Merz, J P Montoya, A Parent, M R Wolfson, T H Shaffer, and R H Bartlett.
    • Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
    • Crit. Care Med. 1995 Jan 1;23(1):157-63.

    ObjectivePerfluorocarbon liquid ventilation has been shown to have advantages over conventional gas ventilation in premature newborn and lung-injured animals. To simplify the process of liquid ventilation, we adapted an extra-corporeal life-support circuit as a time-cycled, volume-limited liquid ventilator.DesignLaboratory study that involved sequential application of gas and liquid ventilation in normal cats and in lung-injured sheep.SettingA research laboratory at a university medical center.SubjectsEight normal cats weighing 2.7 to 3.8 kg (mean 3.1 +/- 0.5), and four lung-injured young sheep weighing 10.4 to 22.5 kg (mean 15.9 +/- 5.0).InterventionsNormal cats were supported with traditional gas ventilation for 1 hr (respiratory rate 20 breaths/min, peak inspiratory pressure 12 cm H2O, positive end-expiratory pressure 4 cm H2O, and FIO2 1.0). The lungs were then filled with perfluorocarbon (30 mL/kg) and tidal volume liquid ventilation was instituted, utilizing a newly developed liquid ventilation device. Liquid ventilatory settings were 4 secs for inspiration time, 8 secs for expiration time, 5 breaths/min for respiratory rate, and 15 to 20 mL/kg for tidal volume. Liquid ventilation utilizing this device was also applied to sheep after induction of severe lung injury by right atrial injection of 0.07 mL/kg of oleic acid, followed by saline pulmonary lavage. Extracorporeal life support was instituted to provide a stable model of lung injury. For the first 30 mins of extracorporeal support, all animals were ventilated with gas. Animals were then ventilated with 15 mL/kg of perfluorocarbon over the ensuing 2.5 hrs.Measurements And Main ResultsIn normal cats, mean PaO2 values after 1 hr of liquid or gas ventilation were 275 +/- 90 (SD) torr (36.7 +/- 10.4 kPa) in the liquid-ventilated animals and 332 +/- 78 torr (44.3 +/- 10.4 kPa) in the gas-ventilated animals (NS). Mean PaCO2 values were 40.5 +/- 5.7 torr (5.39 +/- 0.31 kPa) in the liquid-ventilated animals and 37.6 +/- 2.3 torr (5.01 +/- 0.31 kPa) in the gas-ventilated animals (NS). Mean arterial pH values were 7.35 +/- 0.07 in the liquid-ventilated animals and 7.34 +/- 0.04 in the gas-ventilated animals (NS). No significant changes in heart rate, mean arterial pressure, lung compliance, or right atrial venous oxygen saturation were observed during liquid ventilation when compared with gas ventilation. In the lung-injured sheep, an increase in physiologic shunt from 15 +/- 7% to 66 +/- 9% was observed with induction of lung injury during gas ventilation. Liquid ventilation resulted in a significant reduction in physiologic shunt to 31 +/- 10% (p < .001). In addition, the extracorporeal blood flow rate required to maintain the PaO2 in the 50 to 80 torr (6.7 to 10.7 kPa) range was substantially and significantly (p < .001) lower during liquid ventilation than during gas ventilation (liquid ventilation 15 +/- 5 vs. gas ventilation 87 +/- 15 mL/min/kg).ConclusionsLiquid ventilation can be performed successfully utilizing this simple adaptation of an extracorporeal life-support circuit. This modification to an existing extracorporeal circuit may allow other centers to apply this new investigational method of ventilation in the laboratory or clinical setting.

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