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Vol. 84, Issue 2, 733-739, February 1998
Harvard-Massachusetts Institute of Technology Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Kolandaivelu, Kumaran, and Chi-Sang Poon.
A miniature mechanical ventilator for newborn mice.
J. Appl. Physiol. 84(2): 733-739, 1998.
Transgenic/knockout mice with predefined mutations have become
increasingly popular in biomedical research as models of human
diseases. In some instances, the resulting mutation may cause
cardiorespiratory distress in the neonatal or adult animals and may
necessitate resuscitation. Here we describe the design and testing of a
miniature and versatile ventilator that can deliver varying ventilatory
support modes, including conventional mechanical ventilation and
high-frequency ventilation, to animals as small as the newborn mouse.
With a double-piston body chamber design, the device circumvents the
problem of air leakage and obviates the need for invasive procedures
such as endotracheal intubation, which are particularly important in
ventilating small animals. Preliminary tests on newborn mice as early
as postnatal day 0 demonstrated
satisfactory restoration of pulmonary ventilation and the prevention of
respiratory failure in mutant mice that are prone to respiratory
depression. This device may prove useful in the postnatal management of
transgenic/knockout mice with genetically inflicted respiratory
disorders.
high-frequency ventilation; body-surface negative pressure ventilation; respiratory failure; neonates; transgenic mice; knockout mice
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