支气管肺发育不良
多不饱和脂肪酸
医学
呼吸窘迫
机械通风
胃肠病学
新生儿重症监护室
低出生体重
通风(建筑)
出生体重
麻醉
脂肪酸
儿科
生理学
生物化学
胎龄
怀孕
化学
生物
工程类
机械工程
遗传学
作者
Mario Rüdiger,Angelika von Baehr,Renate Haupt,Roland R. Wauer,Bernd Rüstow
标识
DOI:10.1097/00003246-200005000-00052
摘要
Oxygen toxicity causes chronic bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) in extremely preterm infants. Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and plasmalogens are the two main substrates for lipid peroxidation in the pulmonary surfactant. In the present study, we tested whether low concentrations of both were associated with development of BPD and whether both were further reduced during mechanical ventilation with oxygen.Prospective, noninterventional, descriptive study.Level III neonatal intensive care unit in a university hospital.In 25 extremely low birth weight infants with respiratory distress syndrome, tracheal aspirates were collected immediately after birth and in the following 4 days. As control, tracheal and pharyngeal aspirates were collected from healthy infants immediately after birth. The amount of PUFA and dimethylacetals (DMA, representing plasmalogens) was determined gas-chromatographically.None.The relative percentages of PUFA and DMA on all fatty acids in non-BPD infants (PUFA% 26+/-8.9, DMA% 3.5+/-1.2) were higher compared with infants who developed BPD (PUFA% 14.5+/-3.8, DMA% 1.8+/-0.9). In term healthy infants, DMA% and PUFA% were in the same range as in the BPD group. The higher levels found for non-BPD infants decreased after day 1 to values equal to the BPD group and remained low.The results suggest that initially higher levels of PUFA and plasmalogens in the tracheal effluent are associated with a reduced risk of developing BPD and are reduced during the first day of ventilation.
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