Prolonged hypercapnic acidosis worsened bacterial infection-induced lung injury. Our findings suggest an immunosuppressive effect of hypercapnic acidosis and have important implications for protective ventilation strategies that permit hypercapnic acidosis in patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome and in the management of hypercapnic acidosis during infective exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other lung diseases.
Our results demonstrate that infection-induced injury in vivo is worsened after renal buffering of hypercapnic acidosis independently of any changes in tidal volume. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the pathogenesis of infection-induced lung injury during the use protective ventilation strategies that permits buffered hypercapnia and during infective exacerbations of chronic lung diseases associated with sustained hypercapnia.
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