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Pulmonary surfactant (medication)
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Pulmonary surfactant is used as a medication to treat and prevent respiratory distress syndrome in newborn babies.[1]
Prevention is generally done in babies born at a gestational age of less than 32 weeks.[1] It is given by the endotracheal tube.[1] Onset of effects is rapid.[2] A number of doses may be needed.[2]
Side effects may include slow heart rate and low oxygen levels.[1] Its use is also linked with intracranial bleeding.[1] Pulmonary surfactant may be isolated from the lungs of cows or pigs or made artificially.[1][3][4]
Pulmonary surfactant was discovered in the 1950s and a manufactured version was approved for medical use in the United States in 1990.[3] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.[5]
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Medical uses
Pulmonary surfactant is used to treat and prevent respiratory distress syndrome in newborn babies.[1] Prevention is generally done in babies born less than 32 weeks gestational age.[1] Tentative evidence supports use in drowning.[6]
Surfactant administration can also be effective in meconium aspiration syndrome where it has been shown to help lower length of stay.[7][8]
Types
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There are a number of types of pulmonary surfactants available. Like their natural counterparts, pulmonary surfactant preparations consist of phospholipids (mainly DPPC) combined with spreading agents such as SP-B and SP-C.[9] Ex-situ measurements of surface tension and interfacial rheology can help to understand the functionality of pulmonary surfactants.[10]
Synthetic pulmonary surfactants:
- Colfosceril palmitate (Exosurf) – a mixture of DPPC with hexadecanol and tyloxapol added as spreading agents
- Pumactant (Artificial Lung Expanding Compound or ALEC) – a mixture of DPPC and PG
- Lucinactant (KL4, trade name Surfaxin) – composed of DPPC, palmitoyl-oleoyl phosphatidylglycerol, and palmitic acid, combined with a 21 amino acid synthetic peptide (sinapultide) that mimics the C-terminal helical domain of SP-B.[11]
- Ventricute - DPPC, rSP-C
Animal-derived surfactants:
- Beractant (Survanta) – extracted from minced cow lung with additional DPPC, palmitic acid and tripalmitin, manufactured by Abbvie
- (Beraksurf) – extracted from minced cow lung with additional DPPC, palmitic acid and tripalmitin, manufactured by Tekzima
- Calfactant (Infasurf) – extracted from calf lung lavage fluid, manufactured by ONY Biotech.
- Poractant alfa (Curosurf) – extracted from material derived from minced pig lung
- Surfactant TA (Surfacten) – derived from cows, manufactured by Tokyo Tanabe Co. [12]
- Bovactant SF-RI (Alveofact) – extracted from cow lung lavage fluid, manufactured by Boehringer Ingelheim
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History
Researcher John Clements identified surfactants and their role in the 1950s. Mary Ellen Avery soon after showed that the lungs of premature infants could not produce surfactants.[13]
Exosurf, Curosurf, Infasurf, and Survanta were the initial surfactants approved for use in the US.[14]
In 2012, the US Food and Drug Administration approved an additional synthetic surfactant, lucinactant (Surfaxin).[15]
Research
Surfactant may be beneficial in those with COVID-19 associated acute respiratory distress syndrome.[16][17]
References
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