The American review of respiratory disease
-
Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · May 1983
Redistribution of pulmonary extravascular water with positive end-expiratory pressure in canine pulmonary edema.
We studied the effect of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on the quantity and distribution of pulmonary extravascular water (PEW) and on lung mechanics and gas exchange in dogs with high pressure pulmonary edema. Lung volumes, intrapulmonary shunt (Qs/Qt), and dynamic compliance (Cdyn) were measured before (baseline) and after (postinfusion) administration of Ringer's Lactate (25% body weight) to maintain pulmonary wedge pressure between 35 and 40 cm H2O in 16 dogs. Animals were then randomly assigned to a control group (n = 8), ventilated to maintain normocarbia for 1.5 h, and to a PEEP group (n = 8) similarly ventilated with the addition of 10 cm H2O PEEP. ⋯ At 1.5 h the PEEP group showed significant improvement in Qs/Qt, FRC, and Cdyn (p less than 0.05). When compared with the control group, the PEEP group had similar amounts of PEW but a greater proportion of cuff H2O. We conclude that PEEP improves gas exchange and lung mechanics, and that it is associated with redistribution of lung water to the "extra-alveolar" interstitial space.
-
Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Mar 1983
Functional and metabolic activity of granulocytes from patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome. Evidence for activated neutrophils in the pulmonary circulation.
Although it has been proposed that the circulating granulocyte (PMN) is an effector cell that causes pulmonary vascular injury in the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), the functional status of PMNs from patients with this disorder has not been previously defined. In the present study we found that PMNs in samples of pulmonary artery blood from patients with ARDS are in a functionally and metabolically activated state. The mean chemotactic index of PMNs from ARDS patients was 172 +/- 22 SEM compared with a mean chemotactic index of 79 +/- 8 of PMNs from normal subjects (p = 0.0001), a 227 +/- 24% increase over the control value. ⋯ The PMNs from patients with ARDS had increased ratios of intracellular cyclic GMP to cyclic AMP (165 +/- 5% of control, p = 0.0002), which may be related to the enhanced metabolic activity. Release of superoxide anion, a potential mediator of endothelial injury, was increased over that of control by PMNs from 4 of 8 patients with ARDS (mean, 205 +/- 71% of normal). The results suggest that the circulating PMN is in an activated state in patients with ARDS and may be more likely to release active oxygen species and other inflammatory mediators when perturbed, potentially contributing to pulmonary vascular injury and alveolitis.