Pulmonary microvessels (<70 microm) lack a complete muscular media. We tested the hypothesis that these thin-walled vessels do not participate in the hypoxic pressor response. Isolated canine lobes were pump perfused at precisely known microvascular pressures. A videomicroscope, coupled to a computerized image-enhancement system, permitted accurate diameter measurements of subpleural arterioles and venules, with each vessel serving as its own control. While vascular pressure was maintained constant throughout the protocol, hypoxia caused an average reduction of 25% of microvessel diameters. The constriction was reversed when nitric oxide was added to the hypoxic gas mixture. The nitric oxide reversal, combined with a lack of lobar blood flow redistribution as measured by fluorescent microspheres, shows that the constriction was active. This response suggests the unexpected potential for active intra-acinar ventilation-perfusion matching.
Pulmonary hypertension frequently complicates the postoperative management of patients after congenital cardiac surgery. Inhaled nitric oxide is an effective treatment option, but rebound pulmonary hypertension can occur upon its withdrawal. Sildenafil may facilitate its withdrawal by restoring cyclic guanosine monophosphate availability via phosphodiesterase-5 inhibition. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the use of sildenafil in facilitating weaning from inhaled nitric oxide after congenital cardiac surgery in patients who had previously failed weaning, and to compare the effects of sildenafil on pulmonary and systemic hemodynamics. Children who received sildenafil after cardiovascular surgery during a 23-month period at Riley Hospital for Children were identified. Medical records were retrospectively reviewed to determine sildenafil and nitric oxide dosing, pulmonary and systemic blood pressures, and adverse effects. Oral sildenafil was administered to 7 children who had failed attempts at inhaled nitric oxide weaning. Inhaled nitric oxide was weaned from 29.8 ± 5.9 ppm prior to sildenafil initiation to 12.2 ± 3.4 ppm (mean ± SE; P = .024) in the 24 hours after sildenafil. Mean pulmonary artery and systemic arterial pressure were unchanged from baseline when measured 1 hour after sildenafil dosing (mean pulmonary artery pressure, 29 ± 1 to 27 ± 0.7 mm Hg, P = .066; mean systemic arterial pressure, 56 ± 1.2 to 54 ± 1.2 mm Hg, P = .202). Sildenafil may facilitate withdrawal of inhaled nitric oxide and prevent rebound pulmonary hypertension in patients previously failing inhaled nitric oxide weaning attempts.
The piglet scaled cortical impact model creates a focal contusion using a skull-mounted, spring-loaded blunt indentation device scaled to achieve identical tissue strains in subjects with different brain sizes. Preliminary data showed that contusion size increased proportional to subject age. This study details the results from a new, larger series of subjects of three ages, and compares the effect of age and additional host and physiologic variables on injury response. Sixty-seven subjects, including infant (5- to 7-day-old), "toddler" (1-month-old), and early adolescent (4-month-old) swine underwent scaled cortical impact under strict anesthetic protocols. Serum glucose, testosterone, and 17beta-estradiol levels were measured. Lesion size was measured at 1 week post injury, as the ratio of the lesion area over the area of the contralateral hemisphere. Adolescent subjects had lesions over eight times larger than infants (p < 0.0001). Lesion volumes were larger in toddlers than in infants, most significantly for males (p < 0.05). Adolescent subjects were warmer on average, but there was no correlation between temperature and lesion volume within any age group. Serum glucose did not differ among ages. Infant males had the highest levels of circulating sex steroids. In this model, age was the most robust predictor of lesion size. Temperature had an effect, but did not explain all the variability seen among age groups. There was an interaction among gender, hormone levels, and lesion size in younger subjects. Characterization of these variables allows use of this model for treatment trials for subjects at different stages of maturation.
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