新生儿呼吸窘迫综合征的病理生理学:对早期治疗策略的影响。

Sean B Ainsworth
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引用次数: 34

摘要

新生儿呼吸窘迫综合征(RDS)仍然是新生儿死亡和发病的主要原因之一,尽管围产期护理取得了进展。婴儿RDS的初始管理几乎变得“过于常规”,很少考虑导致疾病的病理生理过程,以及临床医生如何使用现有的治疗干预措施来优化护理。从胎儿到婴儿的转变涉及出生时许多复杂的适应;最重要的是肺作为气体交换器官的功能。缺乏表面活性剂的早产儿在处理这一转变方面的能力较差。通过通风和灌注的匹配实现最佳的气体交换。在RDS中,通气可能受到气道不张和过度扩张的均匀性的影响,因为透明膜阻塞了小气道。这反过来又会导致炎症发展为支气管肺发育不良。早期给予外源性表面活性剂,特别是在呼气末正压和必要时温和通气的情况下,似乎是预防肺不张的最佳方法。如何在表面活性剂治疗后的新生儿中实现这一目标,通过对新生儿肺部正常生理的回顾以及RDS如何影响这一目标进行了探讨。讨论了复苏、外源性表面活性剂、通气和吸入一氧化氮等治疗干预措施的效果以及目前使用这些措施的最佳方法。希望通过更好地了解新生儿肺部的正常生理,以及疾病和干预措施对该生理的影响,执业临床医生将对患有RDS或有RDS风险的早产儿的管理有更大的认识。
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Pathophysiology of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome: implications for early treatment strategies.

Neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) remains one of the major causes of neonatal mortality and morbidity despite advances in perinatal care. The initial management of infants with RDS has almost become 'too routine' with little thought about the pathophysiological processes that lead to the disease and how the clinician can use the existing therapeutic interventions to optimize care. The transition from fetus to infant involves many complex adaptations at birth; the most important is the function of the lungs as a gas exchange organ. Preterm surfactant-deficient infants are less well equipped to deal with this transition. Optimum gas exchange is achieved through matching of ventilation and perfusion. In RDS, ventilation may be affected by homogeneity of the airways with atelectasis and over distension, as hyaline membranes block small airways. In turn this contributes to the inflammation that becomes bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Exogenous surfactant given early, particularly with positive end-expiratory pressure and, where necessary, gentle ventilation, would seem to be the optimum way to prevent atelectasis. How this can be achieved in neonates after surfactant therapy is explored through a review of the normal physiology of the newborn lung and how this is affected by RDS. The therapeutic interventions of resuscitation, exogenous surfactant, ventilation and inhaled nitric oxide are discussed in relation to their effects and what are currently the optimum ways to use these. It is hoped that with a better understanding of the normal physiology in the newborn lung, and the effects of both disease and interventions on that physiology, the practising clinician will have a greater appreciation of management of preterm infants with, or at risk of, RDS.

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