Partial liquid ventilation with perfluorocarbons for treatment of ARDS in burns

2001 
Abstract Pulmonary failure remains the major determinant of mortality and morbidity following burn injury. We hypothesized that intratracheal instillation of perfluorocarbon liquids could be a therapeutic measure in combination with conventional mechanical ventilation to improve pulmonary gas exchange in acute respiratory distress syndrome with thermal injury. Forty-five New Zealand rabbits were used for this prospective and randomized experimental study. The animals were burned by scald to reach full-thickness 40% burn surface area. After inducing respiratory distress by repeated lung lavage with saline, animals were divided randomly into three groups of 15 rabbits each. First group (control group) received conventional treatment (continuous positive-pressure ventilation) using a FiO 2 of 1.0, tidal volume of 12 ml/kg, respiratory frequency of 30 cycles/min and PEEP of 6 cm H 2 O. Second group was treated with 9 ml/kg of intratracheal perfluorocarbon. Third group was treated with 15 ml/kg of intratracheal perfluorocarbon. All groups were ventilated for 6 h. In the perfluorocarbon groups, PaO 2 increased significantly ( P P 2 O to the post treatment 10.22±0.12 cm H 2 O and increase ( P 2 O with the perfluorocarbon. Perfluorocarbon instillation did not result in statistically significant changes in arterial pressure, heart rate and central venous pressure. In conclusion, partial liquid ventilation with perfluorocarbon is a new technique leading to a marked and sustained improvement in oxygenation and pulmonary function in an experimental model of ARDS in burns.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    26
    References
    13
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []