Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.,
Volume 161, Number 1, January 2000, 152-159
Differential Impact of Ultrasonically Nebulized Versus
Tracheal-instilled Surfactant on Ventilation-Perfusion
(
A/
) Mismatch in a Model of Acute Lung Injury
RALPH THEO
SCHERMULY,
ANDREAS
GÜNTHER,
NORBERT
WEISSMANN,
HOSSEIN ARDESCHIR
GHOFRANI,
WERNER
SEEGER,
FRIEDRICH
GRIMMINGER,
and
DIETER
WALMRATH
Department of Internal Medicine, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, Giessen, Germany
In a model of acute lung injury, established by saline lavage of isolated perfused rabbit lungs, the effect of ultrasonic surfactant nebulization on gas exchange was compared with that of tracheal instillation, assessed by the multiple inert gas elimination technique (MIGET). Ultrasonic aerosolization
provided particles with a mass median aerodynamic diameter of 4.5 µm (geometric SD, 2.3), the pulmonary deposition of which was monitored on-line by a laserphotometric technique. Under baseline
conditions, a narrow unimodal distribution of ventilation and perfusion with shunt-flow ranging below 2% and absence of perfusion of low
A/
(0.01 <
A/
< 0.1) areas was noted throughout. This
physiological
A/
matching was not affected by lung deposition of 8.6 mg surfactant/kg body
weight (bw), forwarded by 1 h ultrasonic nebulization. In contrast, tracheal bolus injection of 80 mg/
kg bw surfactant in control lungs provoked the appearance of low
A/
areas (maximum
13% of
perfusion) and shunt flow (4 to 6%), in addition to marked ventilation-perfusion mismatch (broadening of perfusion and ventilation distribution) in the midrange
A/
regions. The saline lavage procedure caused progressive development of shunt flow (
22%) and perfusion of low
A/
areas
(
7%), associated with severe
A/
mismatch. "Rescue" tracheal instillation of 80 mg/kg bw surfactant in lavaged lungs reduced the shunt-flow to
4%, but increased the perfusion of low
A/
areas
to 10 to 14%;
A/
mismatch in the midrange
A/
regions was not improved. Ultrasonic deposition
of 8.8 mg surfactant/kg bw in the injured lungs reduced the shunt flow to
7% and the perfusion of
low
A/
areas to < 2%, coincident with improvement of
A/
matching in the midrange
A/
areas. We conclude that low doses of ultrasonically delivered natural surfactant are similarly effective
as "conventional" doses of tracheal-instilled surfactant in reducing shunt flow in an acute lung injury
model, but exert more advantageous effects on ventilation perfusion matching. Schermuly RT,
Günther A, Weissmann N, Ghofrani HA, Seeger W, Grimminger F, Walmrath D. Differential
impact of ultrasonically nebulized versus tracheal-instilled surfactant on ventilation-perfusion (
A /Q·) mismatch in a model of acute lung injury.