Abstract

Surfactant treatment is a manner to reduce alveolar superficial tension and increase pulmonary compliance in premature neonates. Thus, we aimed to analyze the effect of exogenous surfactant treatment in combination with manual ventilation for preterm lambs. We used 15 ewes and their lambs (n = 16), prematurely born at 135 days. At birth, lambs were submitted to orotracheal intubation attached to a handheld resuscitation device and randomly allocated to: Control Group (n = 5; only manual ventilation), Single Surfactant Group (n = 5; manual ventilation coupled by intratracheal administration of 100 mg/kg surfactant) and Double Surfactant Group (n = 6; surfactant volume was divided into two doses (50 mg/kg + 50 mg/kg) administrated at birth and 30 min thereafter). A complete physical exam, arterial gas analysis, blood glucose, urea and creatinine concentration and chest radiographic assessment were performed at fixed times. All lambs had decreased body temperature until 20 min after birth. However, control and double surfactant groups reached a thermic plateau after 30 min. Regardless of the time-point, control lambs had higher heart rate in comparison to treated neonates, including bradycardia in Single Surfactant Group. Single instillation led to lower oxygenation degree, compared to the Double Surfactant Group, suggesting that surfactant treatment was not able to adequately spread within the alveoli. Lambs treated with surfactant had severe impairment of aerobic activity, leading to anaerobic metabolism. All groups had hypercapnia, which can be explained by inadequate respiratory pattern and pulmonary opacity (89% of the lambs had severe or moderate lung content). In conclusion, exogenous surfactant therapy in association with manual ventilation is ineffective in reverting pulmonary immaturity of the preterm lamb, leading to less vitality, hypoxemia, delayed pulmonary clearance and high mortality rate.

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