Author:
Peers de Nieuwburgh Maureen,Dave Apeksha,Khan Sameer A.,Ngo Michelle,Hayes Kevin B.,Slipenchuk Matthew,Lieberman Evan,Youssef Mohanad R.,Crompton Dan,Choudhry Alia Mohsin,Guo Nan,Tian Zhiyun,Rychik Jack,Davey Marcus G.,Flake Alan W.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Our team has previously reported physiologic support by the EXTra-uterine Environment for Neonatal Development (EXTEND) of 105 to 117 days gestational age (GA) lambs for up to 28 days with normal organ maturation. However, the fetal lamb brain matures more rapidly, requiring the study of 90-105 day GA fetal lambs to assess more neurodevelopmentally equivalent lambs to the 23–25 week GA extreme premature infant.
Methods
Extremely preterm lambs (90–95 days of GA) were delivered by C-section and supported by EXTEND. Estimated circuit flows were maintained at around 325 ml/kg/min. After support on EXTEND, MRI and histopathologic analysis were performed and compared to 105–112 days GA control lambs.
Results
The extremely preterm group includes 10 animals with a mean GA of 91.6 days, a mean weight at cannulation of 0.98 kg and a mean length of stay on EXTEND of 13.5 days (10–21 days). Hemodynamics and oxygenation showed stable parameters. Animals showed growth and physiologic cardiac function. MRI volumetric and diffusion analysis was comparable to controls. Histologic brain analysis revealed no difference between study groups.
Conclusion
EXTEND appears to support brain and cardiac development in an earlier gestation, less mature, lamb model.
Impact
Prolonged (up to 21 days) physiological support of extremely preterm lambs of closer neurodevelopmental equivalence to the 24–28 gestational week human was achieved using the EXTEND system.
EXTEND treatment supported brain growth and development in extremely preterm fetal lambs and was not associated with intraventricular hemorrhage or white matter injury.
Daily echocardiography demonstrated physiologic heart function, absence of cardiac afterload, and normal developmental increase in cardiac chamber dimensions.
This study demonstrates hemodynamic and metabolic support by the EXTEND system in the extremely preterm ovine model.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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