4 research outputs found
Evaluation of Peritoneal Microbubble Oxygenation Therapy in a Rabbit Model of Hypoxemia
Alternative extrapulmonary oxygenation technologies are needed to treat patients suffering from severe hypoxemia refractory to mechanical ventilation. We previously demonstrated that peritoneal microbubble oxygenation (PMO), in which phospholipid-coated oxygen microbubbles (OMBs) are delivered into the peritoneal cavity, can successfully oxygenate rats suffering from a right pneumothorax. This study addressed the need to scale up the procedure to a larger animal with a splanchnic cardiac output similar to humans. Our results show that PMO therapy can double the survival time of rabbits experiencing complete tracheal occlusion from6.6 ± 0.6 min for the saline controls to 12.2 ± 3.0 min for the bolus PMO-treated cohort. Additionally, we designed and tested a new peritoneal delivery system to circulate OMBs through the peritoneal cavity. Circulation achieved a similar survival benefit to bolus delivery under these conditions. Overall, these results support the feasibility of the PMO technology to provide extrapulmonary ventilation for rescue of severely hypoxic patients
Development of Peritoneal Microbubble Oxygenation as an Extrapulmonary Treatment for Hypoxia
Patients affected by a respiratory disease or injury experience a substantially impaired respiratory system and as a consequence are unable to obtain a sufficient amount of oxygen. Hypoxia can quickly result in developing permanent tissue damage or death. Currently, the medical methods of treating hypoxia are mechanical ventilation or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. However, these treatments are ineffective in certain cases and possess significant additional risks including barotrauma, infection, hemorrhage, and thrombosis. The extrapulmonary method of peritoneal oxygenation has been investigated by other research groups as a potential alternative to providing supplemental oxygen in hypoxic animals. In peritoneal oxygenation, the peritoneum, the serous membrane that lines the abdominal cavity and organs, functions as an interface for gas exchange. However, previous attempts using artificial perfluorocarbons and hemoglobin based oxygen carriers have demonstrated limited increase in oxygenation and substantial health concerns. In this work, peritoneal microbubble oxygenation (PMO) therapy has been investigated as a viable method for delivering supplemental oxygen to hypoxic patients with critical lung injury. PMO therapy is accomplished with a custom infusion device designed to safely deliver oxygen microbubbles (OMBs), an innovative oxygen carrier, into the abdomen. Animal models of acute lung trauma and respiratory disease were used to validate PMO therapy. The first model was a small animal feasibility study where fatal hypoxia was induced by pneumothorax. The second model was asphyxia by tracheal occlusion to test PMO therapy in the most severe lung injury. When animals were infused with OMBs, the average survival times after the incidence of injury increased significantly. PMO treatment increased mean survival time in fatal pneumothorax by 650% and by 180% in asphyxia. Finally, a respiratory disease model was developed and characterized to replicate acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in rats. ARDS pathology was reproduced by aerosolizing an endotoxin, lipopolysaccharide, into the lungs to incite an antagonistic immune response. Additionally, delivering OMBs for prolonged PMO treatment to rats was facilitated by comparing the efficiencies of multiple catheters implanted into the peritoneal cavity. The ARDS and treatment model could then be used to evaluate PMO therapy and other new methods of supplemental oxygen delivery