Articles: respiratory-distress-syndrome.
-
Clinics in perinatology · Jun 1992
Review Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialNeonatal management of the very low birth weight infant: the use of surfactant.
The use of surfactant in the low birth weight infant with respiratory distress syndrome has undergone multicenter randomized clinical trials. This article addresses the properties of surfactant, the clinical aspects of surfactant replacement therapy and the implications for future research.
-
Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jun 1992
ReviewIntravascular membrane oxygenation and carbon dioxide removal--a new application for permissive hypercapnia?
Pressure limited ventilation or "lung rest" may prevent further exacerbation of acute lung injury from high airway pressures. A therapeutic goal of an intracorporeal oxygenation and carbon dioxide removal device (IVOX) is reduction of airway pressures. We noted increased IVOX CO2 removal as mixed venous CO2 increased in experimental animals. ⋯ Therefore, intentional hypoventilation to limit airway pressures (mild permissive hypercapnia) was used in 5 patients with respiratory failure, and again we noted improved CO2 removal with increasing mixed venous CO2 concentrations. Preliminary calculations demonstrate that a CO2 gradient of approximately 70 mm Hg is needed to remove 100 ml CO2/min. The use of more aggressive permissive hypercapnia protocols with IVOX may permit further reduction in airway pressure without problems of severe respiratory acidosis.
-
Two groups of intubated newborn babies were studied to determine the clinical effects of interrupted bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) by suction catheter (S-BAL) and the similarities to adult fibreoptic BAL of fractional processing of sequential lavage fluid (BALF). Both groups were lavaged by two aliquots of 1 ml.kg-1, instilled via a blindly placed suction catheter, wedged on two separate insertions through the right main bronchus. In 14 infants, (sequential lavage group), BALF aliquots were analysed separately. ⋯ At 1 min after lavage there was a rise in mean arterial blood pressure (39 vs 49.5 mmHg, p less than 0.05) and a fall in transcutaneous oxygenation (10.6 vs 7.5 kPa, p less than 0.05). Recovery was present at 3 min post-S-BAL, but mean blood pressure remained elevated (39 vs 45 mmHg, p less than 0.05) and transcutaneous oxygen continued to be lower when compared to baseline values (10.6 vs 9.2 kPa, p less than 0.05). S-BAL of intubated infants appears to sample both the proximal and distal airways and results in changes in vital signs similar to routine non-selective endotracheal suctioning.