Seminars in perinatology
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Seminars in perinatology · Jun 1996
Effect of modulators of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction on the response to inhaled nitric oxide in a neonatal model of severe pulmonary atelectasis.
Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) is an intrinsic mechanism that facilitates ventilation to perfusion matching and preservation of oxygenation. We investigated the neonatal HPV response from extensive atelectasis and tested the hypothesis that (I) the resulting hypoxemia is corrected by inhaled nitric oxide (NO); (2) the "pulmonary steal" of blood away from hypoxic area is further improved by modulators of the HPV. Intratracheal injection of steel beads in 32 piglets (7 to 20 days) resulted in atelectasis of 50% to 75% of the lungs. ⋯ Following the development of atelectasis, the peripheral chemoreceptor agonists (ALM and DOX) did not modify gas exchange and had no significant cardiovascular effect. ALM and DOX failed to enhance the response to NO. IND did not alter HPV, but prevented the improvement in gas exchange associated with NO-induced pulmonary vasodilation.