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  • Title: Comparison of the effects of moderate and severe hypercapnic acidosis on ventilation-induced lung injury.
    Author: Yang W, Yue Z, Cui X, Guo Y, Zhang L, Zhou H, Li W.
    Journal: BMC Anesthesiol; 2015 Apr 30; 15():67. PubMed ID: 25924944.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: We have proved that hypercapnic acidosis (a PaCO2 of 80-100 mmHg) protects against ventilator-induced lung injury in rats. However, there remains uncertainty regarding the appropriate target PaCO2 or if greater CO2 "doses" (PaCO2 > 100 mmHg) demonstrate this effect. We wished to determine whether severe acute hypercapnic acidosis can reduce stretch-induced injury, as well as the role of nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) in the effects of acute hypercapnic acidosis. METHODS: Fifty-four rats were ventilated for 4 hours with a pressure-controlled ventilation mode set at a peak inspiratory pressure (PIP) of 30 cmH2O. A gas mixture of carbon dioxide with oxygen (FiCO2 = 4-5%, FiCO2 = 11-12% or FiCO2 = 16-17%; FiO2 = 0.7; balance N2) was immediately administered to maintain the target PaCO2 in the NC (a PaCO2 of 35-45 mmHg), MHA (a PaCO2 of 80-100 mmHg) and SHA (a PaCO2 of 130-150 mmHg) groups. Nine normal or non-ventilated rats served as controls. The hemodynamics, gas exchange and inflammatory parameters were measured. The role of NF-κB pathway in hypercapnic acidosis-mediated protection from high-pressure stretch injury was then determined. RESULTS: In the NC group, high-pressure ventilation resulted in a decrease in PaO2/FiO2 from 415.6 (37.1) mmHg to 179.1 (23.5) mmHg (p < 0.001), but improved by MHA (379.9 ± 34.5 mmHg) and SHA (298.6 ± 35.3 mmHg). The lung injury score in the SHA group (7.8 ± 1.6) was lower than the NC group (11.8 ± 2.3, P < 0.05) but was higher than the MHA group (4.4 ± 1.3, P < 0.05). Compared with the NC group, after 4 h of high pressure ventilation, the MHA and SHA groups had decreases in MPO activity of 67% and 33%, respectively, and also declined the levels of TNF-α (58% versus 72%) and MIP-2 (76% versus 60%) in the BALF. Additionally, both hypercapnic acidosis groups reduced stretch-induced NF-κB activation (p < 0.05) and significantly decreased lung ICAM-1 expression (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Moderate hypercapnic acidosis (PaCO2 maintained at 80-100 mmHg) has a greater protective effect on high-pressure ventilation-induced inflammatory injury. The potential mechanisms may involve alterations in NF-κB activity.
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