Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Crit Care Med. 2011 Mar;39(3):527-32. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e318206b99b.
To adapt an animal model of acute lung injury for use as a standard protocol for a screening initial evaluation of limited function, or "surge," ventilators for use in mass casualty scenarios.
Prospective, experimental animal study.
University research laboratory.
Twelve adult pigs.
Twelve spontaneously breathing pigs (six in each group) were subjected to acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome via pulmonary artery infusion of oleic acid. After development of respiratory failure, animals were mechanically ventilated with a limited-function ventilator (simplified automatic ventilator [SAVe] I or II; Automedx, Germantown, MD) for 1 hr or until the ventilator could not support the animal. The limited-function ventilator was then exchanged for a full-function ventilator (Servo 900C; Siemens-Elema, Solna, Sweden).
Reliable and reproducible levels of acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome were induced. The SAVe I was unable to adequately oxygenate five animals with Pao2 (52.0±11.1 torr) compared to the Servo (106.0±25.6 torr; p=.002). The SAVe II was able to oxygenate and ventilate all six animals for 1 hr with no difference in Pao2 (141.8±169.3 torr) compared to the Servo (158.3±167.7 torr).
We describe a novel in vivo model of acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome that can be used to initially screen limited-function ventilators considered for mass respiratory failure stockpiles and that is intended to be combined with additional studies to definitively assess appropriateness for mass respiratory failure. Specifically, during this study we demonstrate that the SAVe I ventilator is unable to provide sufficient gas exchange, whereas the SAVe II, with several more functions, was able to support the same level of hypoxemic respiratory failure secondary to acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome for 1 hr.
将急性肺损伤动物模型改编为用于筛选有限功能(即“激增”)呼吸机的标准方案,以便在大规模伤亡情况下使用。
前瞻性实验动物研究。
大学研究实验室。
12 头成年猪。
通过肺动脉内注入油酸使 12 头自主呼吸的猪(每组 6 头)发生急性肺损伤/急性呼吸窘迫综合征。发生呼吸衰竭后,使用有限功能呼吸机(简化自动呼吸机[SAVe]I 或 II;Automedx,Germantown,MD)对动物进行机械通气 1 小时,或直至呼吸机无法支持动物。然后,将有限功能呼吸机更换为全功能呼吸机(Servo 900C;Siemens-Elema,Solna,Sweden)。
可靠且可重复地诱导出急性肺损伤/急性呼吸窘迫综合征。SAVe I 无法为五头动物提供足够的氧合,其 PaO2(52.0±11.1torr)与 Servo(106.0±25.6torr;p=.002)相比明显较低。SAVe II 能够为六头动物提供 1 小时的氧合和通气,其 PaO2(141.8±169.3torr)与 Servo(158.3±167.7torr)相比没有差异。
我们描述了一种新型的急性肺损伤/急性呼吸窘迫综合征体内模型,可用于初步筛选用于大规模呼吸衰竭储备的有限功能呼吸机,并且旨在与其他研究相结合,以明确评估其在大规模呼吸衰竭中的适用性。具体来说,在本研究中,我们证明 SAVe I 呼吸机无法提供足够的气体交换,而具有更多功能的 SAVe II 能够在 1 小时内支持相同程度的继发于急性肺损伤/急性呼吸窘迫综合征的低氧性呼吸衰竭。