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Time to lung aeration during a sustained inflation at birth is influenced by gestation in lambs. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied how the time it takes to achieve optimal lung aeration during sustained lung inflation (SI) at birth varies with the gestational age of lambs.
  • The study found that younger lambs (118 days) required significantly more time (median of 229 seconds) for stable lung aeration compared to older lambs (139 days), which took about 72 seconds.
  • The findings suggest that understanding these gestational age differences could help improve SI protocols in order to optimize lung aeration for infants during birth.

Article Abstract

BackgroundCurrent sustained lung inflation (SI) approaches use uniform pressures and durations. We hypothesized that gestational-age-related mechanical and developmental differences would affect the time required to achieve optimal lung aeration, and resultant lung volumes, during SI delivery at birth in lambs.Methods49 lambs, in five cohorts between 118 and 139 days of gestation (term 142 d), received a standardized 40 cmHO SI, which was delivered until 10 s after lung volume stability (optimal aeration) was visualized on real-time electrical impedance tomography (EIT), or to a maximum duration of 180 s. Time to stable lung aeration (T) within the whole lung, gravity-dependent, and non-gravity-dependent regions, was determined from EIT recordings.ResultsT was inversely related to gestation (P<0.0001, Kruskal-Wallis test), with the median (range) being 229 (85,306) s and 72 (50,162) s in the 118-d and 139-d cohorts, respectively. Lung volume at T increased with gestation from a mean (SD) of 20 (17) ml/kg at 118 d to 56 (13) ml/kg at 139 d (P=0.002, one-way ANOVA). There were no gravity-dependent regional differences in T or aeration.ConclusionsThe trajectory of aeration during an SI at birth is influenced by gestational age in lambs. An understanding of this may assist in developing SI protocols that optimize lung aeration for all infants.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/pr.2017.141DOI Listing

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