J Korean Med Sci.  1996 Oct;11(5):429-436. 10.3346/jkms.1996.11.5.429.

In vitro effect of meconium on the physical surface properties and morphology of exogenous pulmonary surfactant

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, Masan Samsung Hospital, Asan Medical Center, Masan, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

The pathophysiology of meconium aspiration syndrome(MAS) is related to mechanical obstruction of the airways and to chemical pneumonitis. Meconium is also suggested to cause functional deterioration of pulmonary surfactant. Recent studies have reported that meconium inhibits the physical surface properties of pulmonary surfactant, and that administration of exogenous surfactant may provide therapeutic benefits in animal models or infants with respiratory distress due to MAS. To assess the effects of meconium on physical surface properties, especially the changes on the air-liquid interface and hypophase of pulmonary surfactant in vitro, we studied the following findings; a) the surface spreading rate(SSR) and the surface adsorption rate(SAR), b) the viscosity, c) the electron microscopic changes, on a series of mixtures with various concentrations of lyophilized human meconium and Surfactant-TA(SurfactenTM). The human meconium has significantly increased the surface tension of SSR and the viscosity of pulmonary surfactant, but had decreased the surface pressure of SAR of surfactant, and changed the electron microscopic findings of surfactant. We have concluded that these findings support the concept that meconium-induced surfactant dysfunction may play a role in the pathophysiology of MAS.

Keyword

Pulmonary surfactant; Meconium; Meconium aspiration syndrome; Electron microscopy

MeSH Terms

Human
Infant, Newborn
Meconium/*metabolism
Pulmonary Surfactants/*metabolism
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