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Effects of surfactant depletion on regional pulmonary metabolic activity during mechanical ventilation
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Effects of surfactant depletion on regional pulmonary metabolic activity during mechanical ventilation

Nicolas de Prost, Eduardo L. Costa, Tyler Wellman, Guido Musch, Tilo Winkler, Mauro R. Tucci, R. Scott Harris, Jose G. Venegas and Marcos F. Vidal Melo
Journal of applied physiology (1985), Vol.111(5), pp.1249-1258
11/01/2011
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00311.2011
PMCID: PMC3220309
PMID: 21799132
url
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/3220309View
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Abstract

de Prost N, Costa EL, Wellman T, Musch G, Winkler T, Tucci MR, Harris RS, Venegas JG, Vidal Melo MF. Effects of surfactant depletion on regional pulmonary metabolic activity during mechanical ventilation. J Appl Physiol 111: 1249-1258, 2011. First published July 28, 2011; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00311.2011.-Inflammation during mechanical ventilation is thought to depend on regional mechanical stress. This can be produced by concentration of stresses and cyclic recruitment in low-aeration dependent lung. Positron emission tomography (PET) with F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose (F-18-FDG) allows for noninvasive assessment of regional metabolic activity, an index of neutrophilic inflammation. We tested the hypothesis that, during mechanical ventilation, surfactant-depleted low-aeration lung regions present increased regional F-18-FDG uptake suggestive of in vivo increased regional metabolic activity and inflammation. Sheep underwent unilateral saline lung lavage and were ventilated supine for 4 h (positive end-expiratory pressure = 10 cmH(2)O, tidal volume adjusted to plateau pressure = 30 cmH(2)O). We used PET scans of injected N-13-nitrogen to compute regional perfusion and ventilation and injected F-18-FDG to calculate F-18-FDG uptake rate. Regional aeration was quantified with transmission scans. Whole lung F-18-FDG uptake was approximately two times higher in lavaged than in nonlavaged lungs (2.9 +/- 0.6 vs. 1.5 +/- 0.3 10(-3)/min; P < 0.05). The increased F-18-FDG uptake was topographically heterogeneous and highest in dependent low-aeration regions (gas fraction 10-50%, P < 0.001), even after correction for lung density and wet-to-dry lung ratios. F-18-FDG uptake in low-aeration regions of lavaged lungs was higher than that in low-aeration regions of nonlavaged lungs (P < 0.05). This occurred despite lower perfusion and ventilation to dependent regions in lavaged than nonlavaged lungs (P < 0.001). In contrast, F-18-FDG uptake in normally aerated regions was low and similar between lungs. Surfactant depletion produces increased and heterogeneously distributed pulmonary F-18-FDG uptake after 4 h of supine mechanical ventilation. Metabolic activity is highest in poorly aerated dependent regions, suggesting local increased inflammation.
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