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* From the Department of Immunology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA.
Correspondence to: Charles G. Cochrane, MD, Department of Immunology, IMM12, The Scripps Research Institute, 10550 N Torrey Pines Rd, La Jolla, CA 92037; e-mail: cochrane{at}scripps.edu
In a model of ARDS in adult rabbits, we have compared the capacity of exogenous synthetic surfactant, administered by bolus or by lavage, to reexpand the lungs and to inhibit the inflammatory process. The surfactant used contained DPPC and POPG (3:1) together with palmitic acid (15% by weight) and the peptide KLLLLKLLLLKLLLLKLLLLK (KL4) that mimics SP-B.1 This surfactant preparation, termed KL4-surfactant, has been evaluated in animal studies2 and a clinical trial in 47 patients with idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome.3
Pulmonary injury was induced by partial removal of intrinsic surfactant with five lavages with 0.9% saline solution, 30 mL/kg per lavage, followed by instillation of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), 0.25 µg/kg. The rabbits were ventilated with 100% O2. Initial PaO2 levels > 500 mm Hg fell to < 150 within 2 h. Three to 4 h after induction of injury, at a time when inflammation in the lungs was minimal, rabbits were divided into four treatment groups: group 1 (n = 10) received a bolus of KL4-surfactant, 100 mg/kg divided between right and left sides; group 2 (n = 6) received two BALs with KL4-surfactant, 2.5 and 10 mg/mL, 20 mL/kg, divided between right and left sides, leaving, after termination of the lavage, an average of 92 mg KL4-surfactant per kilogram in the lungs; group 3 (n = 4) received two lavages with 0.9% saline solution, 20 mL/kg, divided between right and left sides; and group 4 (n = 7) received nothing. Rabbits were killed 6 to 8 h after LPS, ie, 3 to 4 h after treatment. Rabbits in groups 3 and 4 showed no rise in PaO2 over the 6- to 7-h period of the study and the lungs were atelectatic (Fig 1 , 2). Marked inflammatory exudate, with edema fluid, polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs), and RBCs, was distributed throughout the lungs. Electron photomicrographs revealed the presence of PMNs and edema in the vascular spaces and alveoli, swelling of endothelial and epithelial cells, and random sloughing of epithelial cells, leaving denuded basement membranes. Group 1 rabbits, after bolus instillation of the surfactant, showed a rise in PaO2 over a 1- to 2-h period to > 300 mm Hg. The lungs were partly expanded, but large zones of atelectasis were present (Fig 2) . Microscopically, the expanded zones showed bubble-like cleared zones in the alveoli otherwise filled with edema fluid and PMNs, and the atelectatic areas were filled with inflammatory exudate. Rabbits treated with KL4-surfactant by lavage (group 2) had a rapid and sustained increase in PaO2 to > 300 (Fig 1) . The lungs revealed a uniform expansion (Fig 2) at pressures of 4 or 0 cm H2O, and microscopically there was minimal inflammatory exudate in the air-expanded alveoli. Postmortem BAL fluids in untreated (group 4) vs KL4-surfactant lavaged rabbits (group 2) showed protein concentration of 8.3 ± 0.3 vs 2.2 ± 0.3 mg/mL, myeloperoxidase of 780 ± 60 vs 160 ± 30 U/mL, and PMN levels of 8,200 ± 300 PMNs per cubic millimeter vs 1,200 ± 400. The data indicated that lavage with KL4-surfactant reduced the amount of inflammatory exudate. Similar data showing a reduction of pulmonary inflammation induced by intratracheal instillation of meconium was noted in rabbits treated with surfactant, but not saline solution lavage.4
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These results indicate that lavage of LPS-injured lungs in adult rabbits with dilute KL4-surfactant produced a more uniform expansion of the lung and that the lungs contained considerably less inflammatory exudate than when the KL4-surfactant was administered by bolus. Since the presence of inflammatory exudate in the lungs may adversely affect the clinical course and patient survival in ARDS, the lavage method of administering surfactant appears to offer advantages not experienced by the bolus method of administration. In addition, these studies indicate that treatment of highly inflamed lungs results in a less complete recovery in comparison to treatment of moderately inflamed lungs, in part owing to inactivation of the exogenously administered surfactant.
References
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