Hypercapnic acidosis in ventilator-induced lung injury

被引:48
|
作者
Peltekova, Vanya
Engelberts, Doreen
Otulakowski, Gail
Uematsu, Satoko [1 ]
Post, Martin
Kavanagh, Brian P. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Hosp Sick Children, Dept Crit Care Med, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada
[2] Univ Toronto, Hosp Sick Children, Dept Anesthesia, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
Hypercapnia; VILI; Nitrotyrosine; COX-2; FACTOR-KAPPA-B; CARBON-DIOXIDE; THERAPEUTIC HYPERCAPNIA; PERMISSIVE HYPERCAPNIA; GENE-EXPRESSION; NITRIC-OXIDE; SRC FAMILY; ENDOTOXIN; CYTOKINES; RELEASE;
D O I
10.1007/s00134-010-1787-7
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Permissive hypercapnia is established in lung injury management. Therapeutic hypercapnia causes benefit or harm, depending on the context. Ventilator-associated lung injury has a wide spectrum of candidate mechanisms, affording multiple opportunities for intervention such as hypercapnia to exert benefit or harm. To confirm (1) that hypercapnia attenuates in vivo ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI); (2) biological plausibility of such protection (e.g., dose-response, time series, inflammatory profile); and (3) that the associated biochemical events are consistently beneficial. A mouse model of VILI was established in vivo. Injurious ventilation was established, hypercapnia applied and markers of inflammation measured. Lung injury was quantified by gas exchange, elastance, microvascular leak, histology and levels of cytokines and eicosanoids, cyclooxygenase and tissue nitrotyrosine. Injurious ventilation caused significant lung injury (mechanics, microvascular leak, histology) and release of inflammatory cytokines, chemokines and eicosanoids. Hypercapnia attenuated these responses, with dose-response and time-dependent effects. No adverse effects of hypercapnia were observed in controls. Hypercapnia suppressed the transcription (mRNA) and translation (protein) of the major inducible prostanoid-generating enzyme (COX-2), but the effects on the downstream eicosanoids were modest. However, hypercapnia significantly increased lung tissue nitrotyrosine-at PaCO2 levels that were protective. Hypercapnia provided consistent and biologically plausible in vivo protection against VILI, but elevated lung tissue levels of nitro-tyrosine as previously described in sepsis. Clinicians and those designing clinical trials need to be aware of the potential for detrimental effects when using hypercapnia in order to balance benefits versus harm with this approach.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:869 / 878
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Hypercapnic acidosis in ventilator-induced lung injury
    Vanya Peltekova
    Doreen Engelberts
    Gail Otulakowski
    Satoko Uematsu
    Martin Post
    Brian P. Kavanagh
    Intensive Care Medicine, 2010, 36 : 869 - 878
  • [2] Protective effects of hypercapnic acidosis on ventilator-induced lung injury
    Broccard, AF
    Hotchkiss, JR
    Vannay, C
    Markert, M
    Sauty, A
    Feihl, F
    Schaller, MD
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2001, 164 (05) : 802 - 806
  • [3] Hypercapnic acidosis is protective in an in vivo model of ventilator-induced lung injury
    Sinclair, SE
    Kregenow, DA
    Lamm, WJE
    Starr, IR
    Chi, EY
    Hlastala, MP
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2002, 166 (03) : 403 - 408
  • [4] Hypercapnic acidosis confers antioxidant and anti-apoptosis effects against ventilator-induced lung injury
    Yang, Wan-Chao
    Song, Chun-Yu
    Wang, Nan
    Zhang, Li-Li
    Yue, Zi-Yong
    Cui, Xiao-Guang
    Zhou, Hua-Cheng
    LABORATORY INVESTIGATION, 2013, 93 (12) : 1339 - 1349
  • [5] HEME OXYGENASE-1 ACTIVATION MEDIATES THE PROTECTIVE EFFECT OF HYPERCAPNIC ACIDOSIS ON VENTILATOR-INDUCED LUNG INJURY
    An, L.
    Qin, X. B.
    Chen, Z. H.
    Li, H. X.
    Sun, B. J.
    Fang, X. Q.
    Liu, C. T.
    RESPIROLOGY, 2016, 21 : 152 - 152
  • [6] Metabolic acidosis may be as protective as hypercapnic acidosis in an ex-vivo model of severe ventilator-induced lung injury: a pilot study
    Theodoros Kapetanakis
    Ilias I Siempos
    Eugenios I Metaxas
    Petros Kopterides
    George Agrogiannis
    Efstratios Patsouris
    Andreas C Lazaris
    Konstantinos G Stravodimos
    Charis Roussos
    Apostolos Armaganidis
    BMC Anesthesiology, 11
  • [7] Metabolic acidosis may be as protective as hypercapnic acidosis in an ex-vivo model of severe ventilator-induced lung injury: a pilot study
    Kapetanakis, Theodoros
    Siempos, Ilias I.
    Metaxas, Eugenios I.
    Kopterides, Petros
    Agrogiannis, George
    Patsouris, Efstratios
    Lazaris, Andreas C.
    Stravodimos, Konstantinos G.
    Roussos, Charis
    Armaganidis, Apostolos
    BMC ANESTHESIOLOGY, 2011, 11
  • [8] Ventilator-induced lung injury
    Ricard, JD
    Dreyfuss, D
    Saumon, G
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2003, 22 : 2S - 9S
  • [9] Ventilator-induced lung injury
    Plötz, FB
    INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE, 2001, 27 (02) : 452 - 452
  • [10] Ventilator-induced Lung Injury
    Beitler, Jeremy R.
    Malhotra, Atul
    Thompson, B. Taylor
    CLINICS IN CHEST MEDICINE, 2016, 37 (04) : 633 - +