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1.

Introduction

Lung-protective ventilation aims at using low tidal volumes (VT) at optimum positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEP). Optimum PEEP should recruit atelectatic lung regions and avoid tidal recruitment and end-inspiratory overinflation. We examined the effect of VT and PEEP on ventilation distribution, regional respiratory system compliance (CRS), and end-expiratory lung volume (EELV) in an animal model of acute lung injury (ALI) and patients with ARDS by using electrical impedance tomography (EIT) with the aim to assess tidal recruitment and overinflation.

Methods

EIT examinations were performed in 10 anaesthetized pigs with normal lungs ventilated at 5 and 10 ml/kg body weight VT and 5 cmH2O PEEP. After ALI induction, 10 ml/kg VT and 10 cmH2O PEEP were applied. Afterwards, PEEP was set according to the pressure-volume curve. Animals were randomized to either low or high VT ventilation changed after 30 minutes in a crossover design. Ventilation distribution, regional CRS and changes in EELV were analyzed. The same measures were determined in five ARDS patients examined during low and high VT ventilation (6 and 10 (8) ml/kg) at three PEEP levels.

Results

In healthy animals, high compared to low VT increased CRS and ventilation in dependent lung regions implying tidal recruitment. ALI reduced CRS and EELV in all regions without changing ventilation distribution. Pressure-volume curve-derived PEEP of 21±4 cmH2O (mean±SD) resulted in comparable increase in CRS in dependent and decrease in non-dependent regions at both VT. This implied that tidal recruitment was avoided but end-inspiratory overinflation was present irrespective of VT. In patients, regional CRS differences between low and high VT revealed high degree of tidal recruitment and low overinflation at 3±1 cmH2O PEEP. Tidal recruitment decreased at 10±1 cmH2O and was further reduced at 15±2 cmH2O PEEP.

Conclusions

Tidal recruitment and end-inspiratory overinflation can be assessed by EIT-based analysis of regional CRS.  相似文献   

2.
Lung recruitment maneuvers can help open collapsed lung units for sufficient oxygenation, and positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) is used to keep the lung open after recruitment. However, the application of high PEEP levels may play a significant role in causing regional lung hyperinflation during mechanical ventilation. The authors sought to study the effects of PEEP targeting optimal oxygenation on regional lung volume distribution in a direct and an indirect acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) model. ARDS was induced by either surfactant depletion or oleic acid injection in dogs. After lung recruitment, PEEP was decreased from 20 to 10 cmH2O in 2 cmH2O steps every 10 min to examine regional lung aeration by using computed tomography. Lung injury appeared to be localized in the model of surfactant depletion while it widely diffused after oleic acid infusion. At PEEP levels that achieved optimal oxygenation, nonaerated lung units decreased and normally aerated lung units enhanced, but hyperinflated areas increased significantly in both models (P < 0.05). Hyperinflated areas were greater in the surfactant depletion model than in the oleic acid model at PEEP levels applied (P < 0.05). Optimal oxygenation guided PEEP may cause hyperinflated in both focal lung injury and diffused lung injury post lung recruitment. Hyperinflation was more susceptible in focal lung injury than in diffused lung injury post lung recruitment.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies in anesthetized humans positioned in the left lateral decubitus (LLD) posture have shown that unilateral positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) to the dependent lung produce a more even ventilation distribution and improves gas exchange. Unilateral PEEP to the dependent lung may offer special advantages during LLD surgery by reducing the alveolar-to-arterial oxygen pressure difference {(A-a)PO2 or venous admixture} in patients with thoracic trauma or unilateral lung injury. We measured the effects of unilateral PEEP on regional distribution of blood flow (Q) and ventilation (V(A)) using fluorescent microspheres in pentobarbital anesthetized and air ventilation dogs in left lateral decubitus posture with synchronous lung inflation. Tidal volume to left and right lung is maintained constant to permit the effect on gas exchange to be examined. The addition of unilateral PEEP to the left lung increased its FRC with no change in left-right blood flow distribution or venous admixture. The overall lung V(A)/Q distribution remained relatively constant with increasing unilateral PEEP. Bilateral PEEP disproportionately increased FRC in the right lung but again produced no significant changes in venous admixture or V(A)/Q distribution. We conclude that the reduced dependent lung blood flow observed without PEEP occurs secondary to a reduction in lung volume. When tidal volume is maintained, unilateral PEEP increases dependent lung volume with little effect of perfusion distribution maintaining gas exchange.  相似文献   

4.
This study tests the hypotheses that a recruitment maneuver per se yields and/or intensifies lung mechanical stress. Recruitment maneuver was applied to a model of paraquat-induced acute lung injury (ALI) and to healthy rats with (ATEL) or without (CTRL) previous atelectasis. Recruitment was done by using 40-cmH(2)O continuous positive airway pressure for 40 s. Rats were, then, ventilated for 1 h at zero end-expiratory pressure (ZEEP) or positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP; 5 cmH(2)O). Atelectasis was generated by inflating a sphygmomanometer around the thorax. Additional groups did not undergo recruitment but were ventilated for 1 h under ZEEP. Lung resistive and viscoelastic pressures and static elastance were computed before and immediately after recruitment, and at the end of 1 h of ventilation. Lungs were prepared for histology. Type III procollagen (PCIII) mRNA expression in lung tissue was analyzed by RT-PCR. Lung mechanics improved after recruitment in the CTRL and ALI groups. One hour of ventilation at ZEEP increased alveolar collapse, static elastance, and lung resistive and viscoelastic pressures. Alveolar collapse was similar in ATEL and ALI, and recruitment opened the alveoli in both groups. ALI showed higher PCIII expression than ATEL or CTRL groups. One hour of ventilation at ZEEP did not increase PCIII expression but augmented it significantly in the three groups when applied after recruitment. However, PEEP ventilation after recruitment avoided any increment in PCIII expression in all groups. In conclusion, recruitment followed by ZEEP was more deleterious in ALI than in mechanical ATEL, although ZEEP alone did not elevate PCIII expression. Ventilation with 5-cmH(2)O PEEP prevented derecruitment and aborted the increase in PCIII expression.  相似文献   

5.
Despite decades of research, the mechanisms of ventilator-induced lung injury are poorly understood. We used strain-dependent responses to mechanical ventilation in mice to identify associations between mechanical and inflammatory responses in the lung. BALB/c, C57BL/6, and 129/Sv mice were ventilated using a protective [low tidal volume and moderate positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) and recruitment maneuvers] or injurious (high tidal volume and zero PEEP) ventilation strategy. Lung mechanics and lung volume were monitored using the forced oscillation technique and plethysmography, respectively. Inflammation was assessed by measuring numbers of inflammatory cells, cytokine (IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α) levels, and protein content of the BAL. Principal components factor analysis was used to identify independent associations between lung function and inflammation. Mechanical and inflammatory responses in the lung were dependent on ventilation strategy and mouse strain. Three factors were identified linking 1) pulmonary edema, protein leak, and macrophages, 2) atelectasis, IL-6, and TNF-α, and 3) IL-1β and neutrophils, which were independent of responses in lung mechanics. This approach has allowed us to identify specific inflammatory responses that are independently associated with overstretch of the lung parenchyma and loss of lung volume. These data provide critical insight into the mechanical responses in the lung that drive local inflammation in ventilator-induced lung injury and the basis for future mechanistic studies in this field.  相似文献   

6.
We investigated the effect of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on the extravascular thermal volume of the lung (ETV) determined by the thermal-dye technique in three canine models of pulmonary edema created by injection of alpha-naphthylthiourea (ANTU) or oleic acid (OA) into the pulmonary circulation or intrabronchial instillation of hydrochloric acid (HCl). ETV was determined before, during, and after ventilation with 14 cmH2O PEEP, and final ETV was compared with the extravascular lung mass (ELM) determined postmortem. Final ETV correctly estimated ELM in 12 animals with ANTU injury, ETV/ELM = 1.04 +/- 0.13, but underestimated after HCl injury (n = 5), ETV/ELM = 0.61 +/- 0.23, and OA injury (n = 6), ETV/ELM = 0.73 +/- 0.19. Whereas PEEP had no consistent effect on extravascular thermal volume in ANTU edema, there was a reversible increase in ETV during PEEP in animals with HCl or OA injury and underestimation of ELM. The increase in ETV during PEEP averaged 9.3 +/- 3.8 ml/kg (62 +/- 42%) over the mean of the pre- and post-PEEP values after HCl injury (P less than 0.01) and 6.7 +/- 4.4 ml/kg (47 +/- 35%) after OA injury (P less than 0.02). There was an inverse correlation between the change in ETV during PEEP and the ETV/ELM ratio for animals with HCl and OA injury (r = -0.94). We conclude that PEEP produces a reversible increase in ETV in some models of lung injury by allowing for distribution of thermal indicator through a larger fraction of the lung water and that this response may be useful to detect underestimation when gravimetric measurements are not available.  相似文献   

7.
Volutrauma and atelectrauma have been proposed as mechanisms of ventilator-associated lung injury, but few studies have compared their relative importance in mediating lung injury. The objective of our study was to compare the injury produced by stretch (volutrauma) vs. cyclical recruitment (atelectrauma) after surfactant depletion. In saline-lavaged rabbits, we used high tidal volume, low respiratory rate, and low positive end-expiratory pressure to produce stretch injury in nondependent lung regions and cyclical recruitment in dependent lung regions. Tidal changes in shunt fraction were assessed by measuring arterial Po(2) oscillations. After ventilating for times ranging from 0 to 6 h, lungs were excised, sectioned gravitationally, and assessed for regional injury by evaluation of edema formation, chemokine expression, upregulation of inflammatory enzyme activity, and alveolar neutrophil accumulation. Edema formation, lung tissue interleukin-8 expression, and alveolar neutrophil accumulation progressed more rapidly in dependent lung regions, whereas macrophage chemotactic protein-1 expression progressed more rapidly in nondependent lung regions. Temporal and regional heterogeneity of lung injury were substantial. In this surfactant depletion model of acute lung injury, cyclical recruitment produced more injury than stretch.  相似文献   

8.
Pneumonia caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa carries a high rate of morbidity and mortality. A lung-protective strategy using low tidal volume (V(T)) ventilation for acute lung injury improves patient outcomes. The goal of this study was to determine whether low V(T) ventilation has similar utility in severe P. aeruginosa infection. A cytotoxic P. aeruginosa strain, PA103, was instilled into the left lung of rats anesthetized with pentobarbital. The lung-protective effect of low V(T) (6 ml/kg) with or without high positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP, 10 or 3 cmH(2)O) was then compared with high V(T) with low PEEP ventilation (V(T) 12 ml/kg, PEEP 3 cmH(2)O). Severe lung injury and septic shock was induced. Although ventilatory mode had little effect on the involved lung or septic physiology, injury to noninvolved regions was attenuated by low V(T) ventilation as indicated by the wet-to-dry weight ratio (W/D; 6.13 +/- 0.78 vs. 3.78 +/- 0.26, respectively) and confirmed by histopathological examinations. High PEEP did not yield a significant protective effect (W/D, 4.03 +/- 0.32) but, rather, caused overdistension of noninvolved lungs. Bronchoalveolar lavage revealed higher concentrations of TNF-alpha in the fluid of noninvolved lung undergoing high V(T) ventilation compared with those animals receiving low V(T). We conclude that low V(T) ventilation is protective in noninvolved regions and that the application of high PEEP attenuated the beneficial effects of low V(T) ventilation, at least short term. Furthermore, low V(T) ventilation cannot protect the involved lung, and high PEEP did not significantly alter lung injury over a short time course.  相似文献   

9.
During positive-pressure ventilation parenchymal deformation can be assessed as strain (volume increase above functional residual capacity) in response to stress (transpulmonary pressure). The aim of this study was to explore the relationship between stress and strain on the regional level using computed tomography in anesthetized healthy pigs in two postures and two patterns of breathing. Airway opening and esophageal pressures were used to calculate stress; change of gas content as assessed from computed tomography was used to calculate strain. Static stress-strain curves and dynamic strain-time curves were constructed, the latter during the inspiratory phase of volume and pressure-controlled ventilation, both in supine and prone position. The lung was divided into nondependent, intermediate, dependent, and central regions: their curves were modeled by exponential regression and examined for statistically significant differences. In all the examined regions, there were strong but different exponential relations between stress and strain. During mechanical ventilation, the end-inspiratory strain was higher in the dependent than in the nondependent regions. No differences between volume- and pressure-controlled ventilation were found. However, during volume control ventilation, prone positioning decreased the end-inspiratory strain of dependent regions and increased it in nondependent regions, resulting in reduced strain gradient. Strain is inhomogeneously distributed within the healthy lung. Prone positioning attenuates differences between dependent and nondependent regions. The regional effects of ventilatory mode and body positioning should be further explored in patients with acute lung injury.  相似文献   

10.
Inflammation during mechanical ventilation is thought to depend on regional mechanical stress. This can be produced by concentration of stresses and cyclic recruitment in low-aeration dependent lung. Positron emission tomography (PET) with (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose ((18)F-FDG) allows for noninvasive assessment of regional metabolic activity, an index of neutrophilic inflammation. We tested the hypothesis that, during mechanical ventilation, surfactant-depleted low-aeration lung regions present increased regional (18)F-FDG uptake suggestive of in vivo increased regional metabolic activity and inflammation. Sheep underwent unilateral saline lung lavage and were ventilated supine for 4 h (positive end-expiratory pressure = 10 cmH(2)O, tidal volume adjusted to plateau pressure = 30 cmH(2)O). We used PET scans of injected (13)N-nitrogen to compute regional perfusion and ventilation and injected (18)F-FDG to calculate (18)F-FDG uptake rate. Regional aeration was quantified with transmission scans. Whole lung (18)F-FDG uptake was approximately two times higher in lavaged than in nonlavaged lungs (2.9 ± 0.6 vs. 1.5 ± 0.3 10(-3)/min; P < 0.05). The increased (18)F-FDG uptake was topographically heterogeneous and highest in dependent low-aeration regions (gas fraction 10-50%, P < 0.001), even after correction for lung density and wet-to-dry lung ratios. (18)F-FDG uptake in low-aeration regions of lavaged lungs was higher than that in low-aeration regions of nonlavaged lungs (P < 0.05). This occurred despite lower perfusion and ventilation to dependent regions in lavaged than nonlavaged lungs (P < 0.001). In contrast, (18)F-FDG uptake in normally aerated regions was low and similar between lungs. Surfactant depletion produces increased and heterogeneously distributed pulmonary (18)F-FDG uptake after 4 h of supine mechanical ventilation. Metabolic activity is highest in poorly aerated dependent regions, suggesting local increased inflammation.  相似文献   

11.
We examined the effects of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) and tidal volume on the distribution of ventilation and perfusion in a canine model of asymmetric lung injury. Unilateral right lung edema was established in 10 animals by use of a selective infusion of ethchlorvynol. Five animals were tested in the supine position (horizontal asymmetry) and five in the right decubitus position (vertical asymmetry). Raising PEEP from 5 to 12 cmH2O improved oxygenation despite a redistribution of blood flow toward the damage lung and a consistent decrease in total respiratory system compliance. This improvement paralleled a redistribution of tidal ventilation to the injured lung. This was effected primarily by a fall in the compliance of the noninjured lung due to hyperinflation. The effects of higher tidal volume were additive to those of PEEP. We propose that the major effect of PEEP in inhomogeneous lung injury is to restore tidal ventilation to a population of alveoli recruitable only at high airway pressures.  相似文献   

12.

Objectives

Variable ventilation (VV) seems to improve respiratory function in acute lung injury and may be combined with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) in order to protect the lungs even in healthy subjects. We hypothesized that VV in combination with moderate levels of PEEP reduce the deterioration of pulmonary function related to general anesthesia. Hence, we aimed at evaluating the alveolar stability and lung protection of the combination of VV at different PEEP levels.

Design

Randomized experimental study.

Setting

Animal research facility.

Subjects

Forty-nine male Wistar rats (200–270 g).

Interventions

Animals were ventilated during 2 hours with protective low tidal volume (VT) in volume control ventilation (VCV) or VV and PEEP adjusted at the level of minimum respiratory system elastance (Ers), obtained during a decremental PEEP trial subsequent to a recruitment maneuver, and 2 cmH2O above or below of this level.

Measurements and Main Results

Ers, gas exchange and hemodynamic variables were measured. Cytokines were determined in lung homogenate and plasma samples and left lung was used for histologic analysis and diffuse alveolar damage scoring. A progressive time-dependent increase in Ers was observed independent on ventilatory mode or PEEP level. Despite of that, the rate of increase of Ers and lung tissue IL-1 beta concentration were significantly lower in VV than in VCV at the level of the PEEP of minimum Ers. A significant increase in lung tissue cytokines (IL-6, IL-1 beta, CINC-1 and TNF-alpha) as well as a ventral to dorsal and cranial to caudal reduction in aeration was observed in all ventilated rats with no significant differences among groups.

Conclusions

VV combined with PEEP adjusted at the level of the PEEP of minimal Ers seemed to better prevent anesthesia-induced atelectasis and might improve lung protection throughout general anesthesia.  相似文献   

13.
Oleic acid (OA)injection, lung lavage, and endotoxin infusion are three commonly usedmethods to induce experimental lung injury. The dynamics of lungcollapse and recruitment in these models have not been studied,although knowledge of this is desirable to establish ventilatorytechniques that keep the lungs open. We measured lung density bycomputed tomography during breath-holding procedures. Lung injury wasinduced with OA, lung lavage, or endotoxin in groups of sixmechanically ventilated pigs. After a stabilization period, repetitivecomputed tomography scans of the same slice were obtained duringprolonged expirations with and without positive end-expiratory pressureand during prolonged inspirations after 5 and 30 s of expiration. Lungcollapse and recruitment occurred mainly within the first 4 s ofbreath-holding procedures in all three lung injury models, and somecollapse and recruitment occurred even within 0.6 s. OA-injured lungswere significantly more unstable than lungs injured by bronchoalveolarlavage or endotoxin infusion. In this experimental setting, expirationtimes <0.6 s are required to avoid cyclic alveolar collapse duringmechanical ventilation without extrinsic positive end-expiratorypressure.

  相似文献   

14.
The initiation of ventilation in preterm, surfactant-deficient sheep without positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) causes airway injury and lung inflammation. We hypothesized that PEEP and surfactant treatment would decrease the lung injury from initiation of ventilation with high tidal volumes. Fetal sheep at 128-day gestational age were randomized to ventilation with: 1) no PEEP, no surfactant; 2) 8-cmH(2)O PEEP, no surfactant; 3) no PEEP + surfactant; 4) 8-cmH(2)O PEEP + surfactant; or 5) control (2-cmH(2)O continuous positive airway pressure) (n = 6-7/group). After maternal anesthesia and hysterotomy, the head and chest were exteriorized, and the fetus was intubated. While maintaining placental circulation, the fetus was ventilated for 15 min with a tidal volume escalating to 15 ml/kg using heated, humidified, 100% nitrogen. The fetus then was returned to the uterus, and tissue was collected after 30 min for evaluation of early markers of lung injury. Lambs receiving both surfactant and PEEP had increased dynamic compliance, increased static lung volumes, and decreased total protein and heat shock proteins 70 and 60 in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid compared with other groups. Ventilation, independent of PEEP or surfactant, increased mRNA expression of acute phase response genes and proinflammatory cytokine mRNA in the lung tissue compared with controls. PEEP decreased mRNA for cytokines (2-fold) compared with groups receiving no PEEP. Surfactant administration further decreased some cytokine mRNAs and changed the distribution of early growth response protein-1 expression. The use of PEEP during initiation of ventilation at birth decreased early mediators of lung injury. Surfactant administration changed the distribution of injury and had a moderate additive protective effect.  相似文献   

15.
After air-blood barrier injury, "pneumoproteins" specific to lung epithelial distal airspaces reaching the bloodstream are putative markers of lung hyperpermeability. The contribution of mechanical ventilation (MV) to this leakage is unknown. To explore this issue, 16-kDa Clara cell protein (CC-16) concentration was quantified in bronchoalveolar lavages (BALFs) and/or sera of rats first exposed either to ambient air or to 48 h of hyperoxia-induced acute lung injury and then ventilated for 2 h according to one of the following strategies: 1) spontaneous ventilation (SV), 2) very-low-volume high PEEP (VLVHP, where PEEP is positive end-expiratory pressure), 3) low-volume zero PEEP, 4) moderate-volume low PEEP, and 5) high-volume zero PEEP (HVZP). Results show that total proteins in BALFs increased with time and MV, with little impact from hyperoxia preexposure. CC-16 content decreased in BALFs but increased in the bloodstream during MV, suggesting intravascular leakage. Lung overdistension may result either from high-volume (HVZP) or high-PEEP (VLVHP) MV, and it was the most potent inducer of CC-16 leakage (P < 0.05 vs. SV). In the VLVHP group, pretreatment with keratinocyte growth factor was efficient in reducing blood CC-16 transfer.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on the pulmonary circulation were studied in 14 intact anesthetized dogs with oleic acid (OA) lung injury. Transmural (tm) mean pulmonary arterial pressure (Ppa)/cardiac index (Q) plots with transmural left atrial pressure (Pla) kept constant were constructed in seven dogs, and Ppa(tm)/PEEP plots with Q and Pla(tm) kept constant were constructed in seven other dogs. Q was manipulated by using a femoral arteriovenous bypass and a balloon catheter inserted in the inferior vena cava. Pla was manipulated using a balloon catheter placed by thoracotomy in the left atrium. Ppa(tm)/Q plots were essentially linear. Before OA, the linearly extrapolated pressure intercept of the Ppa(tm)/Q relationship approximated Pla(tm). OA (0.09 ml/kg into the right atrium) produced a parallel shift of the Ppa(tm)/Q relationship to higher pressures; i.e., the extrapolated pressure intercept increased while the slope was not modified. After OA, 4 Torr PEEP (5.4 cmH2O) had no effect on the Ppa(tm)/Q relationship and 10 Torr PEEP (13.6 cmH2O) produced a slight, not significant, upward shift of this relationship. Changing PEEP from 0 to 12 Torr (16.3 cmH2O) at constant Q before OA led to an almost linear increase of Ppa(tm) from 14 +/- 1 to 19 +/- 1 mmHg. After OA, Ppa(tm) increased at 0 Torr PEEP but changing PEEP from 0 to 12 Torr did not significantly affect Ppa(tm), which increased from 19 +/- 1 to 20 +/- 1 mmHg. These data suggest that moderate levels of PEEP minimally aggravate the pulmonary hypertension secondary to OA lung injury.  相似文献   

17.
We aimed to assess the influence of lateral decubitus postures and positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on the regional distribution of ventilation and perfusion. We measured regional ventilation (VA) and regional blood flow (Q) in six anesthetized, mechanically ventilated dogs in the left (LLD) and right lateral decubitus (RLD) postures with and without 10 cmH(2)O PEEP. Q was measured by use of intravenously injected 15-microm fluorescent microspheres, and VA was measured by aerosolized 1-microm fluorescent microspheres. Fluorescence was analyzed in lung pieces approximately 1.7 cm(3) in volume. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to evaluate three-dimensional spatial gradients of Q, VA, the ratio VA/Q, and regional PO(2) (Pr(O(2))) in both lungs. In the LLD posture, a gravity-dependent vertical gradient in Q was observed in both lungs in conjunction with a reduced blood flow and Pr(O(2)) to the dependent left lung. Change from the LLD to the RLD or 10 cmH(2)O PEEP increased local VA/Q and Pr(O(2)) in the left lung and minimized any role of hypoxia. The greatest reduction in individual lung volume occurred to the left lung in the LLD posture. We conclude that lung distortion caused by the weight of the heart and abdomen is greater in the LLD posture and influences both Q and VA, and ultimately gas exchange. In this respect, the smaller left lung was the most susceptible to impaired gas exchange in the LLD posture.  相似文献   

18.
The classic four-zone model of lung blood flow distribution has been questioned. We asked whether the effect of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is different between the prone and supine position for lung tissue in the same zonal condition. Anesthetized and mechanically ventilated prone (n = 6) and supine (n = 5) sheep were studied at 0, 10, and 20 cm H2O PEEP. Perfusion was measured with intravenous infusion of radiolabeled 15-microm microspheres. The right lung was dried at total lung capacity and diced into pieces (approximately 1.5 cm3), keeping track of the spatial location of each piece. Radioactivity per unit weight was determined and normalized to the mean value for each condition and animal. In the supine posture, perfusion to nondependent lung regions decreased with little relative perfusion in nondependent horizontal lung planes at 10 and 20 cm H2O PEEP. In the prone position, the effect of PEEP was markedly different with substantial perfusion remaining in nondependent lung regions and even increasing in these regions with 20 cm H2O PEEP. Vertical blood flow gradients in zone II lung were large in supine, but surprisingly absent in prone, animals. Isogravitational perfusion heterogeneity was smaller in prone than in supine animals at all PEEP levels. Redistribution of pulmonary perfusion by PEEP ventilation in supine was largely as predicted by the zonal model in marked contrast to the findings in prone. The differences between postures in blood flow distribution within zone II strongly indicate that factors in addition to pulmonary arterial, venous, and alveolar pressure play important roles in determining perfusion distribution in the in situ lung. We suggest that regional variation in lung volume through the effect on vascular resistance is one such factor and that chest wall conformation and thoracic contents determine regional lung volume.  相似文献   

19.
To investigate the influence of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on hemodynamic measurements we examined the transmission of airway pressure to the pleural space during varying conditions of lung and chest wall compliance. Eight ventilated anesthetized dogs were studied in the supine position with the chest closed. Increases in pleural pressure were similar for both small and large PEEP increments (5-20 cmH2O), whether measured in the esophagus (Pes) or in the juxtacardiac space by a wafer sensor (Pj). Increments in Pj exceeded the increments in Pes at all levels of PEEP and under each condition of altered lung and chest wall compliance. When chest wall compliance was reduced by thoracic and abdominal binding, the fraction of PEEP sensed in the pleural space increased as theoretically predicted. Acute edematous lung injury produced by oleic acid (OA) did not alter the deflation limb pressure-volume characteristics of the lung, provided that end-inspiratory volume was adequate. With the chest and abdomen restricted OA was associated with less than normal transmission of airway pressure to the pleural space, most likely because the end-inspiratory volume required to restore normal deflation characteristics was not attained. Together these results indicate that the influence of acute edematous lung injury on the transmission of airway pressure to the pleural space depends importantly on the peak volume achieved during inspiration.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the effects of a brief period of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) ventilation or nitroglycerin (NTG) infusion on the distribution of pulmonary blood flow and extravascular thermal volume (ETV) in anesthetized dogs with unilateral HCl lung injury. ETV was determined by the thermal dye technique by use of a monoexponential extrapolation to exclude recirculating indicator, and regional blood flow was determined by a particle distribution technique (radiolabeled plastic microspheres). The lungs were weighted after the animals were killed, and extravascular lung mass (ELM) was determined with the use of hemoglobin to correct for trapped lung blood. Measurements were obtained before instillation of HCl into the right lung and repeated 3 h later before, during, and after PEEP ventilation or NTG infusion. Fractional perfusion of the severely injured portion of the right lung (Qinj/QT) fell from 44.3 +/- 11.1% at base line to 27.8 +/- 15.4% after the onset of lung injury. PEEP produced an acute reversible increase in ETV (63 +/- 37% over average of pre- and post-PEEP values), and the changes in ETV were closely correlated with changes in Qinj/QT (r = 0.91). NTG infusion produced insignificant increases in ETV (14 +/- 10% over average of pre- and postinfusion values) and Qinj/QT (59 +/- 35%), but the changes in ETV and Qinj/QT were strongly correlated (r = 0.92). The fraction of extravascular lung mass detected by the thermodilution measurement averaged 0.44 (range 0.24-0.77).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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