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Comparative Study
Feasibility and short-term effects of biphasic positive airway pressure versus assist-control ventilation in preterm lambs.
- Sven M Schulzke, Graeme R Polglase, Foula Sozo, and J Jane Pillow.
- School of Women's and Infant's Health, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia. sven.schulzke@health.wa.gov.au
- Pediatr. Res. 2009 Dec 1; 66 (6): 665-70.
AbstractBiphasic positive airway pressure (BiLevel) ventilation allows utilization of two alternating positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEP) while permitting unrestricted spontaneous breathing with superimposed synchronized pressure support. We aimed to compare whether BiLevel versus assist-control (A-C) ventilation provides effective gas exchange and reduces severity of early lung injury in preterm lambs. Preterm lambs delivered at 134 d (term = 150 d) were quasirandomized to BiLevel (PEEP low/high 5/20 cm H2O) or A-C5 (PEEP 5 cm H2O) ventilation. Ventilation parameters and arterial blood gases were recorded at regular intervals. Postmortem measurements included pressure-volume relationship, lung inflammatory score, wet/dry body weight ratio, and messenger RNA (mRNA) expression of early markers of lung injury. There were no significant differences between groups in baseline characteristics, oxygenation index (p = 0.49), or partial pressure of carbon dioxide (Paco2) (p = 0.08). BiLevel group lambs showed improved pressure-volume relationship (p = 0.006), lower lung inflammatory score (p = 0.013), and trend toward lower messenger RNA expression of markers of lung injury compared with A-C5 group lambs. In unsedated preterm lambs, BiLevel ventilation provides gas exchange equivalent to A-C ventilation and potentially results in reduced lung injury.
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