Comparison of physiologically and mathematically variable ventilations in a model of acute lung injury

G. Fodor (Geneva, Switzerland)

Source: International Congress 2017 – Respiratory and exercise physiology
Session: Respiratory and exercise physiology
Session type: Thematic Poster
Number: 2252
Disease area: Airway diseases, Respiratory critical care

Congress or journal article abstract

Rating: 0
You must login to grade this presentation.

Share or cite this content

Citations should be made in the following way:
G. Fodor (Geneva, Switzerland). Comparison of physiologically and mathematically variable ventilations in a model of acute lung injury. 2252

You must login to share this Presentation/Article on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or by email.

Member's Comments

No comment yet.
You must Login to comment this presentation.


Related content which might interest you:
Detection of acute lung injury from capnogram parameters
Source: International Congress 2017 – Respiratory and exercise physiology
Year: 2017

The effects of variable ventilation patterns in an animal model of ARDS
Source: International Congress 2018 – New methods and concepts in tests of lung and respiratory muscle function
Year: 2018


PP234 – Lung-on-a-chip device for modelling of ventilator induced lung injury
Source: ERS Lung Science Conference 2021
Year: 2021

The evaluation of the effects of positive-pressure ventilation on lung injury utilizing pathological models of previously injured lung
Source: Eur Respir J 2003; 22: Suppl. 45, 586s
Year: 2003

Effects of prone position on the amount of overdistension and collapsed lung tissue and pulmonary blood flow, in an experimental model of acute lung injury
Source: Annual Congress 2009 - Quality control in lung function and new developments
Year: 2009


Acute exposure to mechanical forces deteriorates lung structure and function in a mouse model of emphysema
Source: Annual Congress 2011 - Physiological basis of respiratory disease
Year: 2011


The effects of repeated recruitment maneuver on acute lung injury in animal models
Source: Eur Respir J 2002; 20: Suppl. 38, 35s
Year: 2002

Inspiratory resistive work as an indicator of progressive lung oedema in a porcine model of acute lung injury
Source: Annual Congress 2008 - Mechanical ventilation and airway management
Year: 2008

Effects of recruitment manoeuvres at different degrees of intravascular lung volume in experimental acute lung injury
Source: Annual Congress 2009 - Airway management, mechanical ventilation and muscle weakness
Year: 2009


Time course of lung parenchyma remodelling in different models of extrapulmonary acute lung injury
Source: Annual Congress 2008 - Animal models of pulmonary fibrosis: mechanisms and therapies
Year: 2008

Time course analysis of lung function and morphometric parameters in a murine model of emphysema
Source: Annual Congress 2011 - Novel mechanisms in lung injury
Year: 2011


Effects of lung volume recruitment on sound transmission in a saline lavage model of acute lung injury (ALI)
Source: Annual Congress 2009 - Airway management, mechanical ventilation and muscle weakness
Year: 2009


Mechanical ventilation interacts with experimental low dose endotoxemia to induce apoptotic lung responses in mice
Source: Annual Congress 2005 - In vivo - approaches to lung injury
Year: 2005


Human acute lung injury versus the endotoxin model
Source: Annual Congress 2008 - Acute lung injury. Do we know what it is? A look at different models
Year: 2008


One lung ventilation: use of the impulse oscillation system to assess lung function in an animal model
Source: Annual Congress 2008 - Assessment of the respiratory system
Year: 2008


Predicting the optimal rate for delivery of recruitment maneuvers in acute lung injury
Source: Annual Congress 2009 - Mechanisms of lung injury: COPD, asthma and acute lung injury
Year: 2009

The time-controlled adaptive ventilation protocol: mechanistic approach to reducing ventilator-induced lung injury
Source: Eur Respir Rev, 28 (152) 180126; 10.1183/16000617.0126-2018
Year: 2019



Inflammatory responses and gas exchange in a sepsis-induced acute lung injury model
Source: Eur Respir J 2005; 26: Suppl. 49, 556s
Year: 2005

The zymosan model of acute lung injury and multiple organ failure
Source: Annual Congress 2008 - Acute lung injury. Do we know what it is? A look at different models
Year: 2008


High peep produced more stable respiratory mechanics than recruitment maneuvers in an infant rat pneumonia model
Source: Annual Congress 2009 - Respiratory disorders of the newborn
Year: 2009