Lung function and surfactant distribution in saline-lavaged sheep given instilled vs. nebulized surfactant
Adult sheep (35 +/- 3 kg) underwent saline lung lavage and 1.5 h of mechanical ventilation to induce acute lung injury. Animals received 100 mg lipid/kg body wt of tracheally instilled surfactant (Inst Surf) or either nebulized surfactant (Neb Surf) or nebulized saline (Neb Saline) and were killed 3 h later. Inst Surf and Neb Surf groups had significant improvements in oxygenation (P < 0.01) and peak inspiratory pressures (PIP) (P < 0.05) compared with pretreatment values. Improvements in oxygenation and PIP for Inst Surf animals were significantly greater than for Neb Surf animals (P < 0.05). Volumes of maximal pressure of quasi-static pressure-volume curves measured at the time the animals were killed were significantly greater for Inst Surf and Neb Surf animals than for animals given Neb Saline (P < 0.05). Alveolar recovery of exogenous surfactant was 100 times greater for Inst Surf animals (1,732 +/- 70 mg) than for Neb Surf animals (15.3 +/- 2.9 mg) at the time they were killed. Although there were no differences in exogenous surfactant distribution patterns at the lobar level between the two surfactant-treated groups, distribution histograms calculated for 10-g lung pieces revealed the Neb Surf animals had significantly more pieces within 25% of the mean value of 1.0 (42.7 +/- 6.9%) than did Inst Surf animals (20.8 +/- 5.5%) (P < 0.01). Exogenous surfactant therapy improved lung function with significantly different quantities of surfactant deposited in lung tissue for the two delivery methods evaluated.