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Evolution of airway hyperresponsiveness in infants with severe congenital diaphragmatic hernia

โœ Scribed by Steven R. Boas; Geoffrey Kurland; Peter G. Greally; Etsuro K. Motoyama


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
841 KB
Volume
22
Category
Article
ISSN
8755-6863

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โœฆ Synopsis


Infants born with severe congenital diaphragmatic hernia (DH) characteristically have pulmonary hypoplasia. Airway hyperresponsiveness during the first 4 weeks of life can be demonstrated in most of these neonates. Early postnatal pulmonary development in infants with severe DH has not been well characterized. We examined lung growth in patients with congenital DH by using the forced deflation method to study pulmonary function in 18 infants on mechanical ventilation who survived neonatal repair of their congenital DH. Thirteen infants without primary pulmonary pathology who required general anesthesia for other surgery served as controls. Infants were further divided according to age at the time of testing into early (age 5 7 days at time of testing) and late (age 2 29 days) groups, yielding four groups of subjects: early diaphragmatic hernia (EDH): n = 9; mean age, 4.2 days; range, 1-7 days; early controls (EC): n = 8; mean age, 3.1 days; range, 1-6 days; late diaphragmatic hernia (LDH): n = 11; mean age, 57.7 days, range, 28-120 days; and late controls (LC); n = 5; mean age, 52.2 days; range 32-90 days. All infants were studied once, with the exception of two infants with DH who were studied on two occasions at EDH and LDH stages. A marked reduction in weight-corrected forced vital capacity (FVC) was seen in the EDH group (13.9 2 3.9 mllkg) as compared to the EC group (44.4 5 4.9 mVkg). During the ensuing 4 months of life, FVC in patients with LDH (24.5 5 1.9 mllkg) was much higher than FVC in patients with EDH (P < 0.05). These findings demonstrate the presence of pulmonary hypoplasia in the EDH group and suggest subsequent rapid postnatal lung growth. An index of rate constant, MEF,$FVC, as compared with control groups was abnormally elevated in EDH subjects (1.87 2 0.3Olsecond vs 1.16 2 0.32/second, P < 0.05), indicating significantly increased lower airway caliber relative to lung volume. The severe reduction of the rate constant in the LDH group (0.36 e 0.05lsecond vs 0.73 t 0.07/second, P < 0.05) suggests the development of lower airway obstruction. After the administration of a nebulized bronchodilator (BD), an increase in MEF25 (32.9%) in the EDH group was not significant, but an increase of 134.7% in the LDH group was significant (P < 0.05). Although the study utilized a cross-sectional design with most of the infants in either the early or late group, present findings suggest that infants with EDH have lung restriction reflecting pulmonary hypoplasia. These infants developed lower airway obstruction and airway hyperresponsiveness with only mild fixed obstruction over the first 4 months of life.


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