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1.
The importance of pulmonary surfactant in maintaining normal lung function, and the observations that alterations in endogenous surfactant contribute to the lung dysfunction associated with acute lung injury (ALI) and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), provide a rationale for administering exogenous surfactant in this setting. The results of clinical trials have been variable, however, in part due to the various surfactant preparations used, the different delivery and dosing methods employed, and the types of patients targeted for this therapy. Based on the insight gained from these studies, ongoing trials have modified these factors to optimize outcome, including one trial that is focusing on patients with direct lung insults such as pneumonia and aspiration. The future of surfactant therapy may well take advantage of the recently described host defense functions of this material. Based on extensive in vitro data as well as in vivo animal studies demonstrating the anti-inflammatory and antibacterial functions of various surfactant components, administration of surfactant earlier in the course of the disease, when lung inflammation is present but before severe lung dysfunction occurs, may prove to be optimal. This review discusses both the biophysical and host defense functions of surfactant in the context of novel therapeutic approaches for patients with ALI/ARDS.  相似文献   

2.
目前烟雾吸入性急性肺损伤(ALI)/急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)的发病机制尚未完全明确,可能与烟雾所致的氧化性损伤、肺表面活性物质变化、细胞因子改变、细胞凋亡的发生有关。与机制相应的治疗方法仍未找到,常见的临床治疗方法(如:机械通气,肺泡灌洗,药物治疗)虽然已被证明有一定疗效,但仍然无法治愈烟雾吸入性ALI/ARDS。体外二氧化碳排除及一氧化氮治疗等新方法的尝试为我们进一步研究烟雾吸入性ALI/ARDS提供了新的思路。  相似文献   

3.
Acute lung injury (ALI) and its more severe form, the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), are syndromes of acute respiratory failure that result from acute pulmonary edema and inflammation. The development of ALI/ARDS is associated with several clinical disorders including direct pulmonary injury from pneumonia and aspiration as well as indirect pulmonary injury from trauma, sepsis, and other disorders such as acute pancreatitis and drug overdose. Although mortality from ALI/ARDS has decreased in the last decade, it remains high. Despite two major advances in treatment, low VT ventilation for ALI/ARDS and activated protein C for severe sepsis (the leading cause of ALI/ARDS), additional research is needed to develop specific treatments and improve understanding of the pathogenesis of these syndromes. The NHLBI convened a working group to develop specific recommendations for future ALI/ARDS research. Improved understanding of disease heterogeneity through use of evolving biologic, genomic, and genetic approaches should provide major new insights into pathogenesis of ALI. Cellular and molecular methods combined with animal and clinical studies should lead to further progress in the detection and treatment of this complex disease.  相似文献   

4.
Pharmacology of acute lung injury   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The acute lung injury (ALI)/acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a clinical syndrome that affects both medical and surgical patients. To date, despite improved understanding of the pathogenesis of ALI/ARDS, pharmacological modalities have been unsuccessful in decreasing mortality. However, several pharmacological agents for ARDS are in development and have shown great promise. In addition to the anti-inflammatory category including late corticosteroids, inhaled nitric oxide, alveolar surfactant, and vasodilators are being evaluated. Replacements of anticoagulation mediators have also suggested beneficial effects on the patient outcome. This article provides an overview of pharmacological treatments of ALI/ARDS.  相似文献   

5.
急性肺损伤/急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ALI/ARES)时肺表面活性物质的成分、功能等均发生变化,研究这些变化对防治ALI/ARDS的发生、发展及预后,都有十分重要的意义。本文综述了肺表面活性物质在ALI/ARDS中的组成成分、代谢、功能改变以及治疗方面的研究进展,为该领域的深入研究提供参考。  相似文献   

6.
RATIONALE: The 1994 American European Consensus Committee definitions of acute lung injury (ALI) and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) have not been applied systematically in the pediatric population. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to evaluate prospectively the epidemiology and clinical risk factors associated with death and prolonged mechanical ventilation in all pediatric patients admitted to two large, pediatric intensive care units with ALI/ARDS using Consensus criteria. METHODS: All pediatric patients meeting Consensus Committee definitions for ALI were prospectively identified and included in a relational database. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: There were 328 admissions for ALI/ARDS with a mortality of 22%. Multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed (1) the initial severity of oxygenation defect, as measured by the Pa(O2)/FI(O2) ratio; (2) the presence of nonpulmonary and non-central nervous system (CNS) organ dysfunction; and (3) the presence of CNS dysfunction were independently associated with mortality and prolonged mechanical ventilation. A substantial fraction of patients (28%) did not require mechanical ventilation at the onset of ALI; 46% of these patients eventually required intubation for worsening ALI. CONCLUSIONS: Mortality in pediatric ALI/ARDS is high and several risk factors have major prognostic value. In contrast to ALI/ARDS in adults, the initial severity of arterial hypoxemia in children correlates well with mortality. A significant fraction of patients with pediatric ALI/ARDS can be identified before endotracheal intubation is required. These patients provide a valuable group in whom new therapies can be tested.  相似文献   

7.
The aim of this study was to determine the incidence and short-term outcome of mechanically ventilated children suffering from acute lung injury (ALI) on a paediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Between January 1 1998 and January 1 2000, all mechanically ventilated children were evaluated using the criteria of an American-European Consensus Conference. Of the 443 children eligible for analysis, 44 (9.9%) were diagnosed as suffering from ALI. Of these, 79.5% developed the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS); 54.5% (24 of 44) fulfilled the ARDS criteria at inclusion and 25% (11 of 44) later. PICU mortality for ALI was 27.3% (12 of 44) and within the ARDS subgroup 31.4% (11 of 35). Of the 12 children who died, 11 had ARDS; the main cause of death was cerebral damage (seven of 12). Acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome are rare diseases on a paediatric intensive care unit with a high mortality. Most of the children with acute lung injury develop acute respiratory distress syndrome. In the acute respiratory distress syndrome subgroup, mortality is higher than in the acute lung injury nonacute respiratory distress syndrome subgroup. Further investigations should confirm prognostic factors (e.g. respiratory parameters) for prediction of outcome.  相似文献   

8.
9.
High-frequency ventilation for acute lung injury and ARDS   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
Krishnan JA  Brower RG 《Chest》2000,118(3):795-807
In patients with acute lung injury (ALI) and ARDS, conventional mechanical ventilation (CV) may cause additional lung injury from overdistention of the lung during inspiration, repeated opening and closing of small bronchioles and alveoli, or from excessive stress at the margins between aerated and atelectatic lung regions. Increasing evidence suggests that smaller tidal volumes (VTs) and higher end-expiratory lung volumes (EELVs) may be protective from these forms of ventilator-associated lung injury and may improve outcomes from ALI/ARDS. High-frequency ventilation (HFV)-based ventilatory strategies offer two potential advantages over CV for pateints with ALI/ARDS. First, HFV uses very small VTs, allowing higher EELVs with less overdistention than is possible with CV. Second, despite the small VTs, high respiratory rates during HFV allow the maintenance of normal or near-normal PaCO(2) levels. In this review, the use of HFV as a lung protective strategy for patients with ALI/ARDS is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Acute lung injury (ALI), including its most serious form called acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), is a devastating disease that can occur at any age. ALI/ARDS accounts for only 5-8% of admissions to pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) but is fatal in 30-60% of cases. International multicenter prospective studies are needed to better understand pediatric ALI/ARDS. However, a reproducible definition of ALI/ARDS is crucial to ensure that study populations are homogeneous. We designed a retrospective review to test the inter-observer variability of chest radiograph interpretation for presence of the American-European Consensus Conference (AECC) radiographic criterion for ALI/ARDS. The medical files of 24 children ventilated for ALI/ARDS in our PICU between January 1993 and December 2002 were reviewed. Five pediatric radiologists and five pediatric intensivists interpreted one frontal chest radiograph (FCR) per patient taken on the day of ALI/ARDS diagnosis. Each reader indicated whether the radiograph showed the AECC radiographic criterion for ALI/ARDS. Data analysis involved comparing each reader to all the others based on the raw agreement and Kappa coefficient (kappa). Features in the 24 patients were consistent with earlier studies. Global inter-observer agreement beyond chance was fair (kappa = 0.29 +/- 0.02) among the five radiologists (kappa = 0.26 +/- 0.05) and among the five intensivists (kappa = 0.29 +/- 0.05). Thus, considerable inter-observer variability occurred in assessing the radiographic criterion for ALI/ARDS, as previously shown in adults. Given the low incidence of ALI/ARDS in children, this variability may have a large impact in studies of pediatric ALI/ARDS.  相似文献   

11.
The aim of the study was to analyse the effects of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on volumetric capnography and respiratory system mechanics in mechanically ventilated patients. Eight normal subjects (control group), nine patients with moderate acute lung injury (ALI group) and eight patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS group) were studied. Respiratory system mechanics, alveolar ejection volume as a fraction of tidal volume (VAE/VT), phase III slopes of expired CO2 beyond VAE and Bohr's dead space (VD/VT(Bohr)) at different levels of PEEP were measured. No differences in respiratory system resistances were found between the ALI and ARDS groups. VD/VT(Bohr) and expired CO2 slope beyond VAE were higher in ALI patients (0.52+/-0.01 and 13.9+/-0.7 mmHg x L(-1), respectively) compared with control patients (0.46+/-0.01 and 7.7+/-0.4 mmHg x L(-1), p<0.01, respectively) and in ARDS patients (0.61+/-0.02 and 24.9+/-1.6 mmHg x L(-1), p<0.01, respectively) compared with ALI patients. VAE/VT differed similarly (0.6+/-0.01 in control group, 0.43+/-0.01 in ALI group and 0.31+/-0.01 in ARDS group, p<0.01). PEEP had no effect on VAE/VT, expired CO2 slope beyond VAE and VD/VT(Bohr) in any group. A significant correlation (p<0.01) was found between VAE/VT and expired CO2 slope beyond VAE and lung injury score at zero PEEP. Indices of volumetric capnography are affected by the severity of the lung injury, but are unmodified by the application of positive end-expiratory pressure.  相似文献   

12.
Acute lung injury (ALI) or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) can be associated with various disorders. Recent investigation has involved clinical studies in collaboration with clinical investigators and pathologists on the pathogenetic mechanisms of ALI or ARDS caused by various disorders. This literature review includes a brief historical retrospective of ALI/ARDS, the neurogenic pulmonary edema due to head injury, the long-term experimental studies and clinical investigations from our laboratory, the detrimental role of NO, the risk factors, and the possible pathogenetic mechanisms as well as therapeutic regimen for ALI/ARDS.  相似文献   

13.
IntroductionAcute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is characterized by hypoxemia and increased lung permeability and would result in acute respiratory failure and with high mortality. In patients who survive from acute lung injury (ALI)/ARDS, it is an active process of the transition from injury to resolution depending on the coordinated immune system. The roles of regulatory CD4+T cells (Tregs) are now gradually being clarified during inflammation and resolution of ARDS. However, clear conclusions about roles of Tregs in ALI/ARDS are only a few.ObjectiveThis review provides an overview of phenotype, differentiation, and suppressive mechanisms of Tregs and focuses on keys of biology of Tregs in alveolar space during the inflammatory response and resolution of ALI/ARDS.Data SourceLiterature search of Web of Science, PubMed, and EMBASE was made to find relative articles about Tregs in ALI/ARDS. We used the following search terms: Tregs, ALI, ARDS, inflammation, and resolution.ConclusionMore and more studies have indicated Tregs involved in the processes of inflammation and resolution of ALI/ARDS. A deep understanding of the roles of Tregs may indicate new treatments for patients of ARDS. Therapies aimed at expansion or adaptive transfer of Tregs could be an effective therapy to ARDS patients.  相似文献   

14.
急性肺损伤(acute lung injury,ALI)/急性呼吸窘迫综合征(acute respiratory distress syndrome,ARDS)是由于多种肺部或肺外的因素引起的肺泡-毛细血管膜弥漫性损伤,进而导致气体交换功能障碍.近年来发现,肺组织的修复与重建在ALI/ARDS的早期阶段即可发生,并且影响着ALI的急性炎症反应.因此,研究ALI/ARDS修复与重建过程中的细胞、细胞因子及其作用机制,有利于深入了解ALI/ARDS早期的发生、发展过程,进而寻找出早期、有效的干预措施.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: The characteristics, incidence and risk factors for acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) may depend on definitions and geography. METHODS: A prospective, 3-day point-prevalence study was performed by a survey of all intensive care units (ICU) in the Netherlands (n=96). Thirty-six ICU's responded (37%), reporting on 266 patients, of whom 151 were mechanically ventilated. The questionnaire included criteria and potential risk factors for ALI/ARDS, according to the North American-European Consensus Conference (NAECC) or the lung injury score (LIS>or=2.5). RESULTS: Agreement between definitions was fair (kappa 0.31-0.42, P=0.001). ALI/ARDS was characterized, regardless of definition, by radiographic densities, low oxygenation ratios, high inspiratory O(2) and airway pressure requirements. Depending on definitions, ALI and ARDS accounted for about 12-33% and 7-9% of ICU admissions per year, respectively, constituting 21-58% (ALI) and 13-16% (ARDS) of all mechanically ventilated patients. The annual incidences of ALI and ARDS are 29.3 (95%CI 18.4-40.1) and 24.0 (95%CI 14.2-33.8) by NAECC, respectively, and are, respectively, 83.6 (95%CI 65.3-101.9) and 20.9 (95%CI 11.7-30.1) by LIS per 100,000. Risk factors for ALI/ARDS were aspiration, pneumonia, sepsis and chronic alcohol abuse (the latter only by NAECC). CONCLUSION: The effect of definitions of ALI/ARDS on mechanical ventilation in the Netherlands is small. Nevertheless, the incidence of ALI/ARDS may be higher than in other European countries but lower than in the USA, and the incidence of ALI by LIS may overestimate compared to that by NAECC. Aspiration, pneumonia, sepsis and chronic alcohol abuse are major risk factors, largely independent of definitions.  相似文献   

16.
Fan E  Stewart TE 《Clinics in Chest Medicine》2006,27(4):615-25; abstract viii-ix
Management of acute lung injury (ALI) and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is largely supportive, with the use of mechanical ventilation being a central feature. Recent advances in the understanding of ALI/ARDS and mechanical ventilation have revealed that lung-protective ventilation strategies may attenuate ventilator-associated lung injury and improve patient morbidity/mortality. High-frequency oscillatory ventilation and airway pressure release ventilation are two novel alternative modes of ventilation that theoretically fulfill the principles of lung protection and may offer an advantage over conventional ventilation for ALI/ARDS.  相似文献   

17.
Zambon M  Vincent JL 《Chest》2008,133(5):1120-1127
BACKGROUND: Over the last decade, several studies have suggested that survival rates for patients with acute lung injury (ALI) or ARDS may have improved. We performed a systematic analysis of the ALI/ARDS literature to document possible trends in mortality between 1994 and 2006. METHODS: We used the Medline database to select studies with the key words "acute lung injury," "ARDS," "acute respiratory failure," and "mechanical ventilation." All studies that reported mortality rates for patients with ALI/ARDS defined according to the criteria of the American European Consensus Conference were selected. We excluded studies with < 30 patients and studies limited to specific subgroups of ARDS patients such as sepsis, trauma, burns, or transfusion-related ARDS. RESULTS: Seventy-two studies were included in the analysis. There was a wide variation in mortality rates among the studies (15 to 72%). The overall pooled mortality rate for all studies was 43% (95% confidence interval, 40 to 46%). Metaregression analysis suggested a significant decrease in overall mortality rates of approximately 1.1%/yr over the period analyzed (1994 to 2006). The mortality reduction was also observed for hospital but not for ICU or 28-day mortality rates. CONCLUSIONS: In this literature review, the data are consistent with a reduction in mortality rates in general populations of patients with ALI/ARDS over the last 10 years.  相似文献   

18.
The human acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a severe pulmonary complication with high mortality rates. To support their vital functions, patients suffering from ARDS are mechanically ventilated. Recently it was shown that low tidal volume ventilation reduces mortality and pro-inflammatory mediator release in these patients, suggesting biotrauma as a side effect of mechanical ventilation. Because the application of exogenous surfactant has been proposed as a treatment for ARDS, we investigated the effect of surfactant on ventilation-induced release of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and 6-keto-PGF(1 alpha) (the stable metabolite of prostacyclin) in isolated perfused mouse lungs ventilated with high end-inspiratory pressures. Instillation of 100mg/kg surfactant into the lungs was well tolerated and improved tidal volume, pulmonary compliance and alveolar expansion. Exogenous surfactant increased the ventilation-induced liberation of TNF and IL-6 into the perfusate, but had no effect on the release of 6-keto-PGF(1 alpha). The surfactant preparation used reduced baseline TNF production by murine alveolar macrophages, indicating that the exaggeration of ventilation-induced TNF release cannot be explained by a direct effect of surfactant on these cells. We hypothesize that ventilation-induced mediator release is explained by stretching of lung cells, which is reinforced by surfactant. The findings that in this model of ventilation-induced lung injury exogenous surfactant at the same time improved lung functions and enhanced mediator release suggest that surfactant treatment may prevent barotrauma and augment biotrauma.  相似文献   

19.
The purpose of this meta‐analysis was to assess whether statins could reduce the morbidity of acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ALI/ARDS) in high‐risk patients and improve the clinical outcomes of patients with ALI/ARDS. Studies were obtained from PubMed, Medline, Embase and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and cohort studies, which reported morbidity, mortality, ventilator‐free days, length of stay in intensive care unit and hospital or oxygenation index, were included in our meta‐analysis. Risk ratio (RR) and weighted mean difference (WMD) were calculated using fixed or random effect model. A total of 13 studies covering 12 145 patients were included. Both the only RCT (P = 0.10) and cohort studies (RR, 1.02; 95% CI, 0.67 to 1.55; P = 0.94) showed that statin therapy did not lower the morbidity of ALI/ARDS in high‐risk patients. The mortality of ALI/ARDS patients was less likely to be improved by statins (RCT, RR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.84 to 1.20; P = 0.97; cohort studies, RR, 1.04; 95% CI, 0.85 to 1.27; P = 0.72). Moreover, no significant difference was observed in ventilator‐free days, length of stay in intensive care unit as well as hospital and oxygenation index. This meta‐analysis suggests that statins neither provide benefit for lowering the morbidity of ALI/ARDS in high‐risk patients nor improve the clinical outcomes of ALI/ARDS patients. Hence, it may not be appropriate to advocate statin use for the prevention and treatment of ALI/ARDS.  相似文献   

20.
Use of a volume- and pressure-limited mechanical ventilation strategy improves clinical outcomes of patients with acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ALI/ARDS). However, the extent to which tidal volumes and inspiratory airway pressures should be reduced to optimize clinical outcomes is a controversial topic. This article addresses the question, "Is there a safe upper limit to inspiratory plateau pressure in patients with ALI/ARDS?" We reviewed data from animal models with and without preexisting lung injury, studies of normal human respiratory system mechanics, and the results of five clinical trials of lung-protective mechanical ventilation strategies. We also present an original analysis of data from the largest of the five clinical trials. The available data from each of these assessments do not support the commonly held view that inspiratory plateau pressures of 30 to 35 cm H2O are safe. We could not identify a safe upper limit for plateau pressures in patients with ALI/ARDS.  相似文献   

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