Effects of partial liquid ventilation with perfluorodecalin in the juvenile rabbit lung after saline injury.

Journal: Critical Care Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the feasibility of using the perfluorochemical, perfluorodecalin, for partial liquid ventilation (PLV) with respect to gas exchange and lung mechanics in normal and saline-injured lungs of juvenile rabbits.

Methods: Experimental, prospective, randomized, controlled study. Methods: Physiology laboratory at a university medical school. Methods: Seventeen juvenile rabbits assigned to three groups. Methods: The conventional mechanical ventilation (CMV)-injury group (n = 5) was treated with CMV after establishing a lung injury; the PLV-injury group (n = 6) was treated with PLV after lung injury; and the PLV-healthy group (n = 6) was supported with PLV without lung injury. Lung injury was created by repeated saline lung lavages. PLV-treated animals received a single dose of intratracheal perfluorodecalin at a volume equal to the measured preinjury gas functional residual capacity (functional residual capacity = 18.6+/-1.5 [SEM] mL/kg).

Results: Sequential measurements of total respiratory compliance and arterial blood chemistries were performed in all groups. Oxygenation index (OI) and ventilation efficiency index were calculated. After lung injury, there was a significant (p < .05) decrease in PaO2, total respiratory compliance, and ventilation efficiency index and an increase in OI and PaCO2. In the PLV-injury group, PLV significantly (p < .05) improved PaO2 (+60%) and OI (-33%) over time. Compliance was significantly (p < .05) higher (90%) than in the CMV-injury group over time.

Conclusions: These results demonstrate that PLV with perfluorodecalin improved oxygenation and increased respiratory compliance in the saline-injured rabbit lung. In addition, similar to the effects of several other perfluorochemical liquids on normal lungs, pulmonary administration of perfluorodecalin was associated with a small impairment in gas exchange and a significant decrease in lung compliance in the juvenile rabbit model.

Authors
A Al Rahmani, K Awad, T Miller, M Wolfson, T Shaffer