Abstract
The effects of vitamin E on the neonatal surfactant system were studied in rabbits exposed to air or hyperoxia (>95±)from birth through 48 h of life. Hyperoxia exposure resulted in lung lavage phospholipid content which reached only 74% of airexposed controls, and static pressurer: Volume observations of decreased maximum distensibility and altered compliance. Treatment with vitamin E(100 mg/kg of dl-α-tocopherol S.Q.)at 1 and 24 h of life was shown to completely abolish these effects of hyperoxia. Morphometrically determined alterations in epithelial cell composition and erythrocyte-contaminated air spaces resulting from hyperoxia exposure were also absent in pups treated with vitamin E. These findings suggest that early vitamin E treatment in vitamin E-deprived newborns prevents hyperoxia associated compromise to the pulmonary surfactant system and selected other aspects of oxygen-induced lung injury in the neonate. © 1984 International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Ward, J. A., & Roberts, R. J. (1984). Vitamin E inhibition of the effects of hyperoxia on the pulmonary surfactant system of the newborn rabbit. Pediatric Research, 18(4), 329–334. https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-198404000-00005
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