Acute Respiratory Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of General Anaesthesia and Invasive Mechanical Ventilation on Alveolo-capillary Membrane: Evaluation of Gas Exchange by the Measurement of Lung Diffusion for Carbon Monoxide (DLCO) and Plasma Dosage of Surfactant Protein-B (SPB).
Mechanical ventilation is a therapeutic method used in order to keep gas exchange adequate
to cell metabolism in patients with acute respiratory failure. It is currently proved that,
although on one hand the use of this method keeps gas exchange, on the other hand it
promotes and supports pulmonary inflammatory processes (VILI). A recent study about the
effect of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on DLCO (diffusing capacity of the lung
for carbon monoxide) in patients undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation has proved that
patients without any evident pulmonary disease (negative medical history, negative chest
clinical examination, normal chest X-ray radiography and normal arterial oxygen tension
[PaO2]) after 24 hours of invasive mechanical ventilation show a significant worsening of
pulmonary gas exchange properties. The authors have supposed that this worsening may be
caused by an early alteration of alveolar-capillary membrane caused by mechanical
ventilation itself. This hypothesis finds support in some studies carried out on animal
models which founds that mechanical ventilation, even when low tidal volumes (Vt) are set
for a few hours, is able to induce lung injury (as shown by histologic findings). The most
sensitive and specific tools the investigators can currently rely on for the study of
alveolar-capillary membrane are the measurement of diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon
monoxide (DLCO) and the evaluation of plasmatic levels of pulmonary surfactant protein B
(SPB). DLCO is a standard, widely diffused technique for the evaluation of functional
alterations of alveolar-capillary membrane and it is currently available also for patients
undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation. SBP is produced by type II pneumocytes in the
alveoli. An increase of its plasmatic levels is correlated to a decay of pulmonary gas
exchange; SPB thus can be considered an alveolar-capillary membrane anatomical damage
marker.
The primary end-point of this study is to evaluate the changes of anatomical (SPB) and
functional (DLCO) features of alveolar-capillary membrane between the spontaneous breathing
and mechanical ventilation as well as the progressive changes affecting DLCO and SPB over
time during general anaesthesia and mechanical ventilation in patients with otherwise
healthy lung undergoing elective surgery. This in order to check the timing of the observed
worsening of alveolar-capillary membrane function, and to find out if the process is
progressive in time.
The secondary end point is to check if the alterations of functional features of alveolar
membrane (DLCO) are proportionate to the increase of alveolar injury marker (SPB), in order
to understand if the worsening of alveolar-capillary membrane function is to be attributable
to an anatomical damage or to a physiologic change of the ventilation-perfusion matching.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 20 |
Est. completion date | October 2012 |
Est. primary completion date | |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - over 18 years of age - undergoing a non-thoracic, non-laparoscopic surgery, lasting more than three hours and requiring general anaesthesia and invasive mechanical ventilation Exclusion Criteria: - COPD 3 Gold stage or above - ASA physical status classification system 4 or above - heart failure NYHA 2 or above - chronic kidney disease - axillary temperature over 38 °C - BMI over 30 kg/m^2 - pregnancy or breastfeeding |
Time Perspective: Prospective
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Italy | Ospedale San Gerardo | Monza | MB |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
San Gerardo Hospital |
Italy,
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