A micro-scale humanized ventilator-on-a-chip to examine the injurious effects of mechanical ventilation†

IF 6.1 2区 工程技术 Q1 BIOCHEMICAL RESEARCH METHODS
Lab on a Chip Pub Date : 2024-08-07 DOI:10.1039/D4LC00143E
Basia Gabela-Zuniga, Vasudha C. Shukla, Christopher Bobba, Natalia Higuita-Castro, Heather M. Powell, Joshua A. Englert and Samir N. Ghadiali
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Abstract

Patients with compromised respiratory function frequently require mechanical ventilation to survive. Unfortunately, non-uniform ventilation of injured lungs generates complex mechanical forces that lead to ventilator induced lung injury (VILI). Although investigators have developed lung-on-a-chip systems to simulate normal respiration, modeling the complex mechanics of VILI as well as the subsequent recovery phase is a challenge. Here we present a novel humanized in vitro ventilator-on-a-chip (VOC) model of the lung microenvironment that simulates the different types of injurious forces generated in the lung during mechanical ventilation. We used transepithelial/endothelial electrical impedance measurements to investigate how individual and simultaneous application of mechanical forces alters real-time changes in barrier integrity during and after injury. We find that compressive stress (i.e. barotrauma) does not significantly alter barrier integrity while over-distention (20% cyclic radial strain, volutrauma) results in decreased barrier integrity that quickly recovers upon removal of mechanical stress. Conversely, surface tension forces generated during airway reopening (atelectrauma), result in a rapid loss of barrier integrity with a delayed recovery relative to volutrauma. Simultaneous application of cyclic stretching (volutrauma) and airway reopening (atelectrauma), indicates that the surface tension forces associated with reopening fluid-occluded lung regions are the primary driver of barrier disruption. Thus, our novel VOC system can monitor the effects of different types of injurious forces on barrier disruption and recovery in real-time and can be used to interogate the biomechanical mechanisms of VILI.

Abstract Image

用于研究机械通气损伤效应的微尺度人源化芯片呼吸机
呼吸功能受损的患者经常需要机械通气才能存活。不幸的是,受伤肺部的不均匀通气会产生复杂的机械力,导致呼吸机诱发肺损伤(VILI)。尽管研究人员已经开发出模拟正常呼吸的片上肺系统,但模拟 VILI 以及随后恢复阶段的复杂机械力仍是一项挑战。在这里,我们展示了一种新型的人源化体外呼吸机芯片(VOC)肺微环境模型,该模型模拟了机械通气过程中在肺部产生的不同类型的损伤力。我们利用经上皮/内皮电阻抗测量来研究单独和同时应用不同的机械力如何改变损伤过程中和损伤后屏障完整性的实时变化。我们发现,压应力(即气压创伤)不会显著改变屏障的完整性,而过度牵拉(20% 循环径向应变,体积创伤)会导致屏障完整性下降,但在机械应力消除后又会迅速恢复。相反,气道重新开放时产生的表面张力(atelectrauma)会导致屏障完整性的快速丧失,相对于体积创伤而言,其恢复时间较晚。同时应用循环拉伸(肺容积创伤)和气道重新开放(无电创伤)表明,与液体闭塞肺区重新开放相关的表面张力是屏障破坏的主要驱动力。因此,我们的新型 VOC 系统可以实时监测不同类型的损伤力对屏障破坏和恢复的影响,并可用于确定 VILI 的生物力学机制。
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来源期刊
Lab on a Chip
Lab on a Chip 工程技术-化学综合
CiteScore
11.10
自引率
8.20%
发文量
434
审稿时长
2.6 months
期刊介绍: Lab on a Chip is the premiere journal that publishes cutting-edge research in the field of miniaturization. By their very nature, microfluidic/nanofluidic/miniaturized systems are at the intersection of disciplines, spanning fundamental research to high-end application, which is reflected by the broad readership of the journal. Lab on a Chip publishes two types of papers on original research: full-length research papers and communications. Papers should demonstrate innovations, which can come from technical advancements or applications addressing pressing needs in globally important areas. The journal also publishes Comments, Reviews, and Perspectives.
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