Abstract
The hemodynamic consequences of patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) were studied during the first few hours of life (1.9 +/- 0.7 hours) in 13 mechanically ventilated, surfactant-treated, preterm lambs (gestational age of 120-124 days). Cardiovascular pressures, left ventricular (LV) performance and regional blood flows were measured using cine left ventriculography and radionuclide-labeled microspheres before and after occlusion of the PDA with a catheter balloon. Before occlusion, the left-to-right shunt was 44 +/- 13%; after occlusion the shunt was negligible (2%). Heart rate (164 +/- 17 beats/min), LV end-diastolic pressure (5 +/- 3 mm Hg), ejection fraction (74 +/- 8%) and cardiac output (241 +/- 13 ml . min-1 . kg-1) were normal and did not change after ductus occlusion. However, "effective" systemic blood flow increased significantly after occlusion (130 +/- 53 vs 228 +/- 93 ml . min-1 . kg-1, p less than 0.001), as did blood flow to organs such as the brain, myocardium and gastrointestinal tract. The reduction of systemic blood flow in the presence of a left-to-right PDA shunt may be responsible for many early pathologic manifestations of the PDA "syndrome" of prematurity even in the absence of overt LV dysfunction.
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