Sammanfattning/
Abstract
The thesis investigates lung function and the effects of rescue surfactant
treatment in mechanically ventilated preterm human infants with respiratory
distress syndrome (RDS), and the effects of ventilation at birth on the
response to surfactant supplementation in preterm lambs. To assess lung
function, the author recorded static pressure-volume (P-V) curves during
passive deflation from total lung capacity (TLC) to ambient pressure and
measured end-expiratory lung volume (FRC) during mechanical ventilation by
tracer gas washout. Compared with air-ventilated infants, mechanically
ventilated infants with early, severe RDS had a markedly reduced TLC, mainly
because of a reduction in amplitude of the P-V curve (low inspiratory
capacity, IC). In addition, dynamic compliance was lower than normal, the
P-V curves were less steep at low pressures, and FRC was reduced. Rescue
surfactant caused an immediate increase in deflation stability of the lungs
resulting in a moderate increase in FRC at 5 cm H2O PEEP, but no significant
change in TLC. Dynamic compliance was unchanged early after surfactant, but
two measures of static compliance, viz. the volume change of the lungs
between peak inspiratory pressure and zero pressure and the steepest slope
of the P-V curve, increased significantly. In preterm lambs, delivered by
caesarean section, manual ventilation with six large breaths at birth
(inflation volumes approximately 30–40 mL/kg and plateau pressures 50–70
cm H2O) completely obliterated the lung mechanical effect of rescue
surfactant given at 30 min of age. Compared with preterm lambs given
prophylactic surfactant before the first breath, lambs given five lung
inflations (8, 16, or 32 mL/kg) just before surfactant had a reduced lung
mechanical response that correlated to the size of lung inflations at birth.
There was also a negative correlation between the size of inflations at
birth and alveolar expansion in histologic sections. Surfactant given before
the first breath did not fully protect against the adverse effect of large
lung inflations (16 mL/kg) if these were given immediately after surfactant.
However, no adverse effect was seen from large lung inflations given at 10
min of age or later. In summary, the main characteristic of severe RDS is a
profound loss of lung volume, and this is not immediately corrected by
rescue surfactant treatment. In preterm lambs, there is a short period early
after birth, presumably before lung liquid has cleared, when the lung is
sensitive to large inflations.