Rationale: The pathophysiological relationship between fluid administration, fluid balance, and mechanical ventilation in the development of lung injury is unclear.
Objectives: To quantify the relative contribution of mechanical power and fluid balance in the development of lung injury.
Methods: Thirty-nine healthy female pigs, divided into four groups, were ventilated for 48 hours with high (~18J/min) or low (~6J/min) mechanical power; and high (~4L) or low (~1L) targeted fluid balance.
Kidney response to acute and mechanically induced variation in ventilation associated with different levels of PEEP has not been investigated. We aimed to quantify the effect of ventilatory settings on renal acid-base compensation. Forty-one pigs undergoing hypo- (<0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntensive Care Med Exp
July 2024
Rationale: Mechanical power (MP) is a summary variable incorporating all causes of ventilator-induced-lung-injury (VILI). We expressed MP as the ratio between observed and normal expected values (MP).
Objective: To define a threshold value of MP leading to the development of VILI.
Background: The individual components of mechanical ventilation may have distinct effects on kidney perfusion and on the risk of developing acute kidney injury; we aimed to explore ventilatory predictors of acute kidney failure and the hemodynamic changes consequent to experimental high-power mechanical ventilation.
Methods: Secondary analysis of two animal studies focused on the outcomes of different mechanical power settings, including 78 pigs mechanically ventilated with high mechanical power for 48 h. The animals were categorized in four groups in accordance with the RIFLE criteria for acute kidney injury (AKI), using the end-experimental creatinine: (1) NO AKI: no increase in creatinine; (2) RIFLE 1-Risk: increase of creatinine of > 50%; (3) RIFLE 2-Injury: two-fold increase of creatinine; (4) RIFLE 3-Failure: three-fold increase of creatinine; RESULTS: The main ventilatory parameter associated with AKI was the positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) component of mechanical power.
Introduction: The use of the pulmonary artery catheter has decreased overtime; central venous blood gases are generally used in place of mixed venous samples. We want to evaluate the accuracy of oxygen and carbon dioxide related parameters from a central versus a mixed venous sample, and whether this difference is influenced by mechanical ventilation.
Materials And Methods: We analyzed 78 healthy female piglets ventilated with different mechanical power.
Intensive Care Med Exp
January 2024
Introduction: Lung weight is an important study endpoint to assess lung edema in porcine experiments on acute respiratory distress syndrome and ventilatory induced lung injury. Evidence on the relationship between lung-body weight relationship is lacking in the literature. The aim of this work is to provide a reference equation between normal lung and body weight in female domestic piglets.
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