Surfactant alterations in severe pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and cardiogenic lung edema.

1996 
Bronchoalveolar lavage fluids (BALF) were analyzed for surfactant abnormalities in 153 patients with acute respiratory failure necessitating mechanical ventilation. Diagnoses were acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in the absence of lung infection (n = 16), severe pneumonia (PNEU; n = 88), ARDS and PNEU (n = 36), and cardiogenic lung edema (CLE; n = 13). The PNEU group was subdivided into groups with alveolar PNEU (n = 35), bronchial PNEU (n = 16), interstitial PNEU (n = 18) and nonclassified PNEU (n = 19). Comparison with healthy controls (n = 20) was undertaken. Total phospholipids (PL), proteins, PL classes (HPTLC) and surfactant apoproteins SP-A and SP-B (ELISA) were quantified in the original BALF. The 48,000 x g pellet from centrifugation of the BAL was used to assess the percentage of large surfactant aggregates (LSA) and the biophysical properties of the surfactant (pulsating bubble surfactometer). All groups with inflammatory lung injury (PNEU and/or ARDS) showed some decrease in the lava...
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