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The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine 1988-Aug

Absence of pulmonary edema during peritonitis and shock in rats.

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E C Rackow
M E Astiz
T G Janz
M W Weil

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We evaluated the development of pulmonary edema early in the course of peritonitis and shock in rats. Peritonitis was established by cecal ligation and perforation. In a preliminary experiment, sepsis was induced in five animals and five animals served as sham-operated controls. Lungs harvested for gravimetric analysis at 6 hours revealed no significant difference in wet-dry/dry (W-D/D) ratios. In a second experiment, 15 rats were randomized to three groups: septic animals, septic animals infused with 5% albumin, and sham-operated animals. Thermodilution cardiac output and arterial blood gases were sequentially measured over a 6-hour interval. At 6 hours, the lungs were harvested for gravimetric analysis. Lung W-D/D and arterial oxygenation were not significantly different between the three groups. The W-D/D was 3.46 +/- 0.10 in sham-operated rats, 3.37 +/- 0.12 in septic rats, and 3.88 +/- 0.27 in albumin-infused septic rats. The alveolar-arterial oxygen difference at 6 hours was 10 +/- 2 mm Hg in sham-operated rats, 7 +/- 1 mm Hg in septic rats, and 13 +/- 6 mm Hg in albumin-infused septic rats. These data suggest that overt pulmonary edema and arterial hypoxemia may not occur early in septic shock when fluid infusion is not excessive.

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