As part of a multicenter surfactant rescue study, the chest X-rays of 239 preterm and term infants were analyzed. To study the influence of surfactant administration on radiographic appearance, 130 patients with a clinical and radiological diagnosis of typical respiratory distress syndrome were selected, in whom adequate chest x-rays before and within 48 h after treatment were available. Median gestational age was 30 weeks (range 25-38 weeks), median birth weight was 1335 g (range 625-3450). The time of surfactant application ranged between 90 min and 24 h after birth (median 6 h). The most common finding after surfactant administration was uniform (n = 47) or disproportionate (n = 46) improvement of pulmonary aeration, which showed a significant correlation to posttreatment reduction of oxygen requirement (p less than 0.0001). Asymmetric clearance was more often localized on the right side and usually disappeared within two to five days. Only in 13 patients no change of ventilation was found. Development of interstitial emphysema (n = 24, including three patients with pneumothorax) after surfactant treatment was an unfavourable prognostic sign. 54% of these patients (13 of 24) died within the first month of life, compared to 8% (7 of 93) in the group of patients with initial improvement of ventilation.
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