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| This article is part of the supplement: 22nd International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency MedicineMeeting abstractThe effects of increasing levels of PEEP on inflammation markers and oxygenation in rats with unilateral lung injuryDepartment of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University of Jena, Bachstrasse 18, 07740 Jena, Germany Brussels, Belgium. 19–22 March 2002 Critical Care 2002, 6(Suppl 1):P8doi:10.1186/cc1783
IntroductionThe effects of PEEP on inflammation and oxygenation during acute lung injury are not well known. Accordingly, we investigated the effect of different PEEP levels on local and systemic parameters of lung injury and inflammatory response in a unilateral in vivo lung injury model. MethodsMale Wistar rats (350 g) underwent left-sided lung injury using endobronchial instillation of 0.4 ml HCl (pH 1) (study group) or endobronchial instillation of 0.1 ml NaCl 0.9% (placebo group). Twenty-four hours after treatment the rats were anesthetized, and intravascular catheters inserted for fluid infusion and hemodynamic monitoring. A tracheostomy was performed and the rats were ventilated for 4 hours with tidal volume of 6 ml/kg body weight and randomly assigned to ZEEP, PEEP = 5 cmH2O or PEEP = 10 cmH2O groups. Oxygenation was measured every 30 min and left and right lung lavage was performed lung after 4 hours of ventilation for cell and protein determination. An ANOVA was used for statistical analysis. Results and conclusionPaO2 was higher in the PEEP groups as in the ZEEP groups. Protein and neutrophils in lung lavage fluid of both sides were higher in injured as in placebo rats. Increasing PEEP levels reduced neutrophil count in lavage fluid of the damaged lung in a dose dependent manner. PEEP increases oxygenation and decreased neutrophil infiltration in this model of lung injury. References
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