Academic Journal

Mild loss of lung aeration augments stretch in healthy lung regions.

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Mild loss of lung aeration augments stretch in healthy lung regions.
المؤلفون: Cereda, Maurizio, Yi Xin, Hamedani, Hooman, Clapp, Justin, Kadlecek, Stephen, Meeder, Natalie, Zeng, Johnathan, Profka, Harrilla, Kavanagh, Brian P., Rizi, Rahim R.
المصدر: Journal of Applied Physiology; 2/15/2016, Vol. 120 Issue 4, p444-454, 11p
مصطلحات موضوعية: LUNG injuries, ATELECTASIS, COMPUTED tomography, MECHANICAL ventilators, LUNG anatomy
مستخلص: Inspiratory stretch by mechanical ventilation worsens lung injury. However, it is not clear whether and how the ventilator damages lungs in the absence of preexisting injury. We hypothesized that subtle loss of lung aeration during general anesthesia regionally augments ventilation and distension of ventilated air spaces. In eight supine anesthetized and intubated rats, hyperpolarized gas MRI was performed after a recruitment maneuver following 1 h of volume-controlled ventilation with zero positive end-expiratory pressure (ZEEP), ... 0.5, and tidal volume 10 ml/kg, and after a second recruitment maneuver. Regional fractional ventilation (FV), apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of ³He (a measurement of ventilated peripheral air space dimensions), and gas volume were measured in lung quadrants of ventral and dorsal regions of the lungs. In six additional rats, computed tomography (CT) images were obtained at each time point. Ventilation with ZEEP decreased total lung gas volume and increased both FV and ADC in all studied regions. Increases in FV were more evident in the dorsal slices. In each lung quadrant, higher ADC was predicted by lower gas volume and by increased mean values (and heterogeneity) of FV distribution. CT scans documented 10% loss of whole-lung aeration and increased density in the dorsal lung, but no macroscopic atelectasis. Loss of pulmonary gas at ZEEP increased fractional ventilation and inspiratory dimensions of ventilated peripheral air spaces. Such regional changes could help explain a propensity for mechanical ventilation to contribute to lung injury in previously uninjured lungs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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قاعدة البيانات: Complementary Index
الوصف
تدمد:87507587
DOI:10.1152/japplphysiol.00734.2015