Mechanical Ventilation-induced Air-Space Enlargement during Experimental Pneumonia in Piglets
- 15 March 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 163 (4) , 958-964
- https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm.163.4.2006072
Abstract
Mechanical ventilation-induced air-space enlargement was investigated in a porcine model of multifocal pneumonia. Following the intrabronchial inoculation of Escherichia coli, 9 piglets (22 +/- 2 kg) were ventilated with a tidal volume (VT) of 15 ml/kg for 43 +/- 15 h. Five noninoculated piglets ventilated for 60 h with the same VT served as control animals. Following death, the lungs were fixed and lung morphometry was assessed. In inoculated animals, unventilated infected and normally ventilated noninfected pulmonary lobules coexisted. In normally ventilated lung regions (1) emphysema-like lesions were present, (2) mean alveolar area and mean linear intercept were significantly greater in inoculated than in control animals, and (3) the degree of alveolar distension correlated with the decrease in respiratory compliance. In unventilated lung areas (1) pseudocysts were frequent, (2) alveolar edema was rare, (3) bronchiolectasis was frequent, (4) mean bronchiolar area was greater in inoculated than in control animals, and (5) the degree of bronchiolar distension correlated with the increase in inspiratory plateau pressure. In conclusion, in piglets with severe bronchopneumonia, air-space enlargement rather than pulmonary edema was the major feature of mechanical ventilation-induced lung barotrauma and resembled lesions previously reported in critically ill patients ventilated using high inspiratory pressures.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regional distribution of gas and tissue in acute respiratory distress syndrome. II. Physiological correlations and definition of an ARDS Severity ScoreIntensive Care Medicine, 2000
- Regional distribution of gas and tissue in acute respiratory distress syndrome. I. Consequences for lung morphologyIntensive Care Medicine, 2000
- Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: CT Abnormalities at Long-term Follow-upRadiology, 1999
- A Simple Automated Method for Measuring Pressure–Volume Curves during Mechanical VentilationAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 1999
- The significance of bronchial dilatation on CT in patients with adult respiratory distress syndromeClinical Radiology, 1998
- Alveolar Overdistension is an Important Mechanism of Persistent Lung Damage following Severe Protracted ARDSAnaesthesia and Intensive Care, 1996
- Mechanical ventilation-induced pulmonary edema. Interaction with previous lung alterations.American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 1995
- Histologic aspects of pulmonary barotrauma in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failureIntensive Care Medicine, 1993
- Nosocomial Bronchopneumonia in the Critically III: Histologic and Bacteriologic AspectsAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1992
- Bronchiolectasis-a complication of artificial ventilation.BMJ, 1982