Publication | Closed Access
Severe Neonatal Respiratory Distress Syndrome Treated with the Isolated Phospholipid Fraction of Natural Surfactant
63
Citations
22
References
1987
Year
Ten newborn infants (795-1680 g) with severe respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) were treated with the isolated phospholipid fraction of bovine or porcine surfactant, which was administered via the airways (dose 200 mg/kg), at a median age of 10.5 h. Before receiving surfactant, all the infants were on artificial ventilation (FiO2 0.6-1.0). Within 2 h after surfactant replacement, the arterial-to-alveolar PO2 ratio increased from 0.1 to 0.35. There was a concomitant improvement in lung aeration on the chest roentgenograms and a significant reduction in the right-to-left shunt. Four patients died of cerebral hemorrhage; two of them also had a patent ductus arteriosus. One surviving infant developed bronchopulmonary dysplasia, and another succumbed 8 months later to the sudden infant death syndrome. No antibodies against surfactant were detected in the sera of the survivors. Since our results show a significant improvement in lung function after replacement therapy, the efficacy of this new surfactant preparation should be further tested in randomized clinical trials.
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