The Journal of surgical research
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Comparative Study
High-frequency ventilation in rabbits with respiratory insufficiency.
Treatment of respiratory insufficiency using continuous positive pressure ventilation (CPPV) with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is often associated with high airway pressures and large tidal volumes resulting in parenchymal damage and an exacerbation of ventilation/perfusion mismatch. High-frequency jet ventilation and high-frequency oscillation purportedly provide adequate ventilation and might preclude these harmful side effects. Few data exist comparing these methods in a model of respiratory insufficiency. ⋯ This rise was the highest with oscillatory ventilation. Three of the six rabbits deteriorated after 3 hr of jet ventilation and died with elevated pCO2S with pO2S with bloody edema coming out of the trachea. Because of this apparent damaging effect of jet ventilation and because oscillatory ventilation achieved the same gas exchange but at lower airway pressures as compared to jet ventilation and CPPV, it is thought that oscillatory ventilation is superior over both jet ventilation and CPPV for application in respiratory insufficiency.