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Pulmonary effects of expiratory-assisted small-lumen ventilation during upper airway obstruction in pigs

Authors :
Arno Schad
Matthias David
Jens Kamuf
Rainer Thomas
Alexander Ziebart
Bastian Duenges
Tanghua Liu
Andreas Garcia-Bardon
Erik K. Hartmann
Source :
Anaesthesia. 70:1171-1179
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

Summary Novel devices for small-lumen ventilation may enable effective inspiration and expiratory ventilation assistance despite airway obstruction. In this study, we investigated a porcine model of complete upper airway obstruction. After ethical approval, we randomly assigned 13 anaesthetised pigs either to small-lumen ventilation following airway obstruction (n = 8) for 30 min, or to volume-controlled ventilation (sham setting, n = 5). Small-lumen ventilation enabled adequate gas exchange over 30 min. One animal died as a result of a tension pneumothorax in this setting. Redistribution of ventilation from dorsal to central compartments and significant impairment of the distribution of ventilation/perfusion occurred. Histopathology demonstrated considerable lung injury, predominantly through differences in the dorsal dependent lung regions. Small-lumen ventilation maintained adequate gas exchange in a porcine airway obstruction model. The use of this technique for 30 min by inexperienced clinicians was associated with considerable end-expiratory collapse leading to lung injury, and may also carry the risk of severe injury.

Details

ISSN :
00032409
Volume :
70
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Anaesthesia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2cd298f85a906242ce34889976d426bc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/anae.13154