A new drug to treat ventilator-induced lung injuries is being developed by Flinders University researchers.
A new drug to treat ventilator-induced lung injuries is being developed by the Flinders University researchers in Australia. Ms Alison Elder, a PhD candidate in the Department of Critical Care Medicine and her colleagues have trialled feG, a new anti-inflammatory drug that is successful in treating bacterial pneumonia and acute pancreatitis, in models of lung injury in rats.
They found the drug may be able to both prevent and effectively lung injuries occurring in hospital intensive care units.
“Ventilators are essential to keep people breathing in intensive care, but can also cause deadly lung damage by forcefully stretching the delicate tissues of the lung,” Ms Elder said.
“By significantly reducing lung damage and improving respiratory function this drug could reduce patient mortality in the intensive care unit,” she said.
Stretching of the lung tissue triggers our immune system to release chemicals that cause inflammation. This can result in further tissue damage, impaired oxygen exchange and fluid accumulation in the lung, leading to death.
“The drug works in three ways: it decreases the infiltration of the inflammatory cells into the lung; it decreases their activation; and it encourages resolution of the injury within the lung,” Ms Elder said.
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The drug, which is based on a natural substance found in the salivary glands of rats, is currently being tested for treating asthma in Phase 1 trials by collaborators in Canada.
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Source-Medindia