4.3 Article

Efficacy of peritoneal oxygenation using a novel artificial oxygen carrier (TRM-645) in a rat respiratory insufficiency model

Journal

SURGERY TODAY
Volume 40, Issue 5, Pages 451-455

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00595-009-4104-8

Keywords

Respiratory failure; Critical care; Peritoneum; Artificial oxygen carrier

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Supplemental oxygenation is essentially important in critically ill patients with potentially reversible pulmonary insufficiency. An extracorporeal membrane oxygenator and percutaneous cardiopulmonary support have been used for these patients. However, these techniques are associated with so many complications that an additional new therapeutic modality is required. The purpose is to investigate if the peritoneal cavity can be used as extrapulmonary respiration that is analogous to peritoneal dialysis and utilizes the efficacy of liposome-encapsulated hemoglobin (artificial oxygen carrier; TRM-645). Rats weighing an average of 300 g (n = 18) received an incision in the right chest to generate pneumothorax, which resulted in severe and lethal hypoxia. Oxygenated TRM-645 and human red blood cells (MAP group) were administered into the peritoneum in the experimental rats' pneumothorax model. No treatment except the right pneumothorax was administered to the sham group. Survival times from the pneumothorax were significantly longer in the TRM-645 and MAP groups than in the sham group (32.0 +/- 6.9 and 22.0 +/- 4.9 min vs 9.2 +/- 1.9 min, P < 0.01). In addition, an arterial blood gas analysis showed that the oxygenation in levels significantly improved. The abdomen (peritoneum) can potentially become an artificial lung that can be employed in critical care settings. TRM-645 provides an alternative to the use of washed human red blood cells.

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