Abstract

Premature lambs were treated with 50 mg/kg of natural surfactant lipid by tracheal instillation either at birth or shortly thereafter when respiratory failure was documented. All lambs were delivered by cesarean section and supported on infant ventilators with 100% oxygen under conditions to mimic the care of human infants with the respiratory distress syndrome. The natural surfactant used for therapy was recovered by lavage from sheep lung. Six 120-d gestational age lambs treated at birth had an initial mean oxygen pressure (pO2) value of 270 +/- 35 mm Hg; this fell within 3 h to less than 100 mm Hg. By 8.3 +/- 0.3 h after birth the lambs were in severe respiratory failure with a mean pH less than 7.1 and a mean pCO2 greater than 70 mm Hg. Six untreated lambs had pH values below 7.0 within 40 min of life despite more intensive respiratory support than was given the treated animals. Treatment with natural surfactant of 17 lambs of 120 and 130 d gestational age after early respiratory failure resulted in a prompt increase in pO2 values from about 35 mm Hg to values over 200 mm Hg and a fall in pCO2 values to normal levels in the majority of animals. This response lasted only approximately 3 h, and a second treatment was less predictably effective.

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