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Dive into the research topics where Vasanth H. Kumar is active.

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Featured researches published by Vasanth H. Kumar.


Pediatric Research | 2006

Pulmonary arterial contractility in neonatal lambs increases with 100% oxygen resuscitation.

Satyan Lakshminrusimha; James A. Russell; Robin H. Steinhorn; Rita M. Ryan; Sylvia F. Gugino; Frederick C. Morin; Daniel D. Swartz; Vasanth H. Kumar

The optimal Fio2 during neonatal resuscitation is a subject of controversy. The effect of exposure to high levels of inspired oxygen on pulmonary arterial (PA) contractility is not known. We studied differences in PA vasoreactivity in term lambs initially ventilated with 21% or 100% oxygen, followed by continued ventilation using oxygen as needed for 24 h, or ventilated with 100% oxygen for 24 h and room air breathing 1-d-old lambs. Term lambs were delivered by cesarean section, intubated, and ventilated with 21% (21%Res) or 100% oxygen (100%Res) for the first 30 min of life. Subsequently, the ventilator Fio2 was adjusted to maintain a Pao2 between 45 and 65 mm Hg for 24 h. Five lambs were ventilated continuously with 100% oxygen (100%24h). Six spontaneously breathing newborn lambs (RA Spont) were studied for comparison. Lambs were killed at 24 h of life and PA rings were isolated and contracted with norepinephrine (NE) and KCl and some were relaxed with A23187 and SNAP in tissue baths. NE and KCl induced contractions were highest in PA isolated from 100%24h lambs, and were significantly higher in 100%Res lambs than PA from 21%Res lambs. Contraction responses in PA from RA Spont lambs were similar to 21%Res lambs. Relaxations to A23187 and SNAP were similar among all ventilated groups. PA contractility to NE and KCl is increased following both brief (30 min) and prolonged (24 h) exposure to 100% oxygen during mechanical ventilation. In contrast, normoxic resuscitation and ventilation do not increase PA contractility.


Pediatric Research | 2007

Pulmonary hemodynamics in neonatal lambs resuscitated with 21%, 50%, and 100% oxygen.

Satyan Lakshminrusimha; James A. Russell; Robin H. Steinhorn; Daniel D. Swartz; Rita M. Ryan; Sylvia F. Gugino; Karen A. Wynn; Vasanth H. Kumar; Bobby Mathew; Khaver Kirmani; Frederick C. Morin

The effect of resuscitation with varying levels of O2 on pulmonary hemodynamics at birth is not well known. We hypothesized that the decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) and subsequent response to pulmonary vasoconstrictors and vasodilators will differ following resuscitation with 21%, 50%, or 100%O2 for 30 min at birth in normal term lambs. Lambs at 141 d gestation were delivered by cesarean section and ventilated with 21% (21% Res; n = 6), 50% (50% Res; n = 6), or 100% O2 (100% Res; n = 7) for 30 min followed by ventilation with 21% O2 in all three groups. A greater decrease in PVR was seen with 50% and 100% O2 ventilation than with 21% O2 (0.21 ± 0.02, 0.21 ± 0.02, and 0.34 ± 0.05 mm Hg/mL/min/kg, respectively). Subsequent pulmonary vasoconstriction to hypoxia (10% O2) and the thromboxane analog U46619 (0.5 and 1 μg/kg/min) was similar in all three groups. After inducing a stable elevation in PVR with U46619, impaired pulmonary vasodilation to inhaled NO (59 ± 4, 65 ± 4, and 74 ± 5% of baseline PVR with 21, 50, and 100%Res, respectively) and acetylcholine infusion (67 ± 8, 75 ± 6, and 87 ± 4% of baseline PVR with 21, 50, and 100%Res, respectively) and rebound pulmonary hypertension following their withdrawal were observed in the 100%Res group. We conclude that, while ventilation with 100% O2 at birth results in a greater initial decrease in PVR, subsequent pulmonary vasodilation to NO/acetylcholine is impaired.


Journal of Perinatology | 2007

Characteristics of pulmonary hypertension in preterm neonates

Vasanth H. Kumar; A A Hutchison; Satyan Lakshminrusimha; Frederick C. Morin; Ralph J. Wynn; Rita M. Ryan

Objective:Characteristics of preterm infants who develop pulmonary hypertension (PHT) and their response to inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) are not well described. Our objective was to identify risk factors for PHT in infants <37 weeks gestational age (GA) and to evaluate their response to iNO.Study design:A retrospective chart review was conducted in infants <37 weeks GA born from July/2000 to October/2005 who had an echocardiographic diagnosis of PHT in the first 4 weeks of life. A comparison non-PHT group was generated matched for GA and birth date. Data on prenatal and postnatal characteristics, response to iNO and mortality were collected.Results:Low Apgar scores, preterm premature rupture of membranes, oligohydramnios, pulmonary hypoplasia and sepsis were independently predictive of PHT. Mortality was significantly higher in the PHT group (26.2% versus 4.1%; P<0.0001) compared to the control group. Low birth weight, severe intraventricular hemorrhage and male sex were significantly associated with death in infants with PHT. Thirty-seven percent (23/61) of infants with PHT were treated with inhaled NO. Infants <29-week GA had poor response to iNO and the response to iNO increased with GA (P<0.02).Conclusions:Low Apgar scores, oligohydramnios and pulmonary hypoplasia are associated with the development of PHT in premature infants. The percentage of infants responding to iNO increases with advancing GA.


Advances in Clinical Chemistry | 2005

Growth factors in lung development.

Vasanth H. Kumar; Satyan Lakshminrusimha; El Abiad Mt; Patricia R. Chess; Rita M. Ryan

Organized and coordinated lung development follows transcriptional regulation of a complex set of cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions resulting in a blood-gas interface ready for physiologic gas exchange at birth. Transcription factors, growth factors, and various other signaling molecules regulate epithelial-mesenchymal interactions by paracrine and autocrine mechanisms. Transcriptional control at the earliest stages of lung development results in cell differentiation and cell commitment in the primitive lung bud, in essence setting up a framework for pattern formation and branching morphogenesis. Branching morphogenesis results in the formation of the conductive airway system, which is critical for alveolization. Lung development is influenced at all stages by spatial and temporal distribution of various signaling molecules and their receptors and also by the positive and negative control of signaling by paracrine, autocrine, and endocrine mechanisms. Lung bud formation, cell differentiation, and its interaction with the splanchnic mesoderm are regulated by HNF-3beta, Shh, Nkx2.1, HNF-3/Forkhead homolog-8 (HFH-8), Gli, and GATA transcription factors. HNF-3beta regulates Nkx2.1, a transcription factor critical to the formation of distal pulmonary structures. Nkx2.1 regulates surfactant protein genes that are important for the development of alveolar stability at birth. Shh, produced by the foregut endoderm, regulates lung morphogenesis signaling through Gli genes expressed in the mesenchyme. FGF10, produced by the mesoderm, regulates branching morphogenesis via its receptors on the lung epithelium. Alveolization and formation of the capillary network are influenced by various factors that include PDGF, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and retinoic acid. Epithelial-endothelial interactions during lung development are important in establishing a functional blood-gas interface. The effects of various growth factors on lung development have been demonstrated by gain- or loss-of-function studies in null mutant and transgenic mice models. Understanding the role of growth factors and various other signaling molecules and their cellular interactions in lung development will provide us with new insights into the pathogenesis of bronchopulmonary dysplasia and disorders of lung morphogenesis.


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2004

Growth factors in the fetal and neonatal lung.

Vasanth H. Kumar; Rita M. Ryan

Formation and orderly development of the mammalian lung results from a complex set of cell to cell and cell to matrix interactions following transcriptional regulation during pulmonary organogenesis. Transcriptional control of differentiation genes early on and epithelial-mesenchymal interactions mediated by growth factors later on, resulting in the formation of conducting airways and an extensive alveolar capillary interface, is critical for normal lung development. HNF-3beta and TTF-1 are transcription factors that are involved in gene regulation and formation and differentiation of respiratory epithelium. Studies done in early mouse embryonic lung demonstrate that a variety of peptide growth factors and their receptors are expressed early on in lung development. Signalling through the FGFR2 is critical to normal development of the distal epithelium and mesenchyme. The inductive and permissive influences of growth factors on lung development has been demonstrated by gain or loss of function experiments in early embryonic mouse lung organ culture, in transgenic and in null mutant mice. VEGF present in airway epithelial cells is involved in the maturation as well as proliferation of capillary endothelial cells. Epithelial-endothelial interactions during lung development are important in establishing a functional blood gas interface. Epithelial-mesenchymal interactions mediated by growth factors are also important in the restoration of normal alveolar architecture after lung injury. Further understanding of the role of these growth factors and their cellular interactions in bronchopulmonary dysplasia and in tissue repair following lung injury, may lead to development of better therapeutic modalities in treating these disorders.


Pediatric Critical Care Medicine | 2009

Milrinone enhances relaxation to prostacyclin and iloprost in pulmonary arteries isolated from lambs with persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn

Satyan Lakshminrusimha; Nicolas Porta; Kathryn N. Farrow; Bernadette Chen; Sylvia F. Gugino; Vasanth H. Kumar; James A. Russell; Robin H. Steinhorn

Prostacyclin is a pulmonary vasodilator and is produced by prostacyclin synthase and stimulates adenylate cyclase (AC) via the prostacyclin receptor (IP) to produce cAMP. Forskolin is a direct stimulant of AC. Phosphodiesterase 3 hydrolyzes cAMP and is inhibited by milrinone. Objective: To characterize the prostacyclin-AC-cAMP pathway in the ovine ductal ligation model of persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN). Setting: University-based laboratory animal facility. Subjects: Lambs delivered to time-dated pregnant ewes. Interventions: Fifth generation pulmonary arteries (PA) and lung parenchyma were isolated from control fetal lambs (n = 8) and fetal lambs with PPHN induced by antenatal ductal ligation (n = 9). We studied relaxation responses to various agonists (milrinone, forskolin, prostacyclin, and iloprost, a prostacyclin analog) that increase cAMP in PA after half-maximal constriction with norepinephrine and pretreatment with propranolol ± indomethacin. Lung protein levels of prostacyclin synthase, IP, AC2, and phosphodiesterase 3A were analyzed by Western blot and cAMP by enzyme-linked immunoassay. Main Results: Milrinone relaxed control and PPHN PA and pretreatment with indomethacin significantly impaired this response. Relaxation to milrinone, prostacyclin, and iloprost were significantly impaired in PA from PPHN lambs. Pretreatment with milrinone markedly enhanced relaxation to prostacyclin and iloprost in PPHN PA, similar to relaxation in control PA. Relaxation to forskolin was similar in control and PPHN PAs indicating normal AC activity. Protein levels of prostacyclin synthase and IP were decreased in PPHN lungs compared with control, but AC2, cAMP, and phosphodiesterase 3A remained unchanged. Conclusions: Prostacyclin and iloprost are dilators of PAs from PPHN lambs and their effect is enhanced by milrinone. This combination therapy may be an effective strategy in the management of patients with PPHN.


Pediatric Research | 2006

Effects of Prostacyclin and Milrinone on Pulmonary Hemodynamics in Newborn Lambs With Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension Induced by Ductal Ligation

Nasir Rashid; Frederick C. Morin; Daniel D. Swartz; Rita M. Ryan; Karen Wynn; Huamei Wang; Satyan Lakshminrusimha; Vasanth H. Kumar

Prostacyclin (PGI2) stimulates adenyl cyclase to synthesize cAMP within the vascular smooth muscle resulting in vasodilatation. Milrinone inhibits cAMP clearance by phosphodiesterase type III. We studied the dose response of pulmonary and systemic hemodynamics to intratracheal (IT) PGI2 in newborn lambs with pulmonary hypertension (PH) and whether intravenous milrinone potentiate these effects. IT-PGI2 at varying doses was administered to lambs with PH induced by prenatal ductal ligation. IT-PGI2 doses were repeated in the presence of intravenous milrinone (bolus—100 μg/kg followed by infusion at 1 μg/kg/min). Increasing doses of IT-PGI2 significantly decreased mean pulmonary arterial pressures (PAP) and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) and increased pulmonary blood flow (PBF). Intravenous milrinone by itself produced a significant reduction in PVR and a significant increase in PBF. Intravenous milrinone significantly shortened the onset, prolonged the duration and degree of pulmonary vasodilation produced by PGI2. We conclude that intravenous milrinone potentiates the pulmonary vasodilator effects of PGI2 at lower doses.


Neonatology | 2009

Exposure to Supplemental Oxygen Downregulates Antioxidant Enzymes and Increases Pulmonary Arterial Contractility in Premature Lambs

Anupama Patel; Satyan Lakshminrusimha; Rita M. Ryan; Daniel D. Swartz; Huamei Wang; Karen A. Wynn; Vasanth H. Kumar

Background: The optimal oxygen concentration for the resuscitation of premature infants remains controversial. Objectives: We studied the effects of 21 versus 100% oxygen at initial resuscitation and also the effects of 24-hour exposure to 100% oxygen on arterial blood gases, oxidant lung injury, activities of lung antioxidant enzymes (AOEs) and isolated pulmonary artery (PA) contractility in preterm newborn lambs. Methods: Preterm lambs at 128 days’ gestation (term = 145 days) were delivered and ventilated with 21 (RAR; n = 5) or 100% oxygen (OXR; n = 5) for the first 30 min of life. Subsequently, FiO2 was adjusted to maintain an arterial PO2 (PaO2) between 45 and 70 mm Hg for 24 h. A third group of lambs was mechanically ventilated with 100% oxygen for 24 h (OX24; n = 5). Results: Oxidized glutathione levels in whole blood correlated highly with PaO2. Reduced to oxidized glutathione ratio was significantly different between the groups, the ratio increasing with decreasing oxygen exposure. The OX24 group had significantly higher activities of lipid hydroperoxide and myeloperoxidase and significantly lower activities of superoxide dismutase, catalase and glutathione peroxidase in the lung at 24 h. Activities of AOEs correlated inversely with alveolar PO2. PA contractility to norepinephrine and KCl was greater with increasing oxygen exposure. Pretreatment with superoxide dismutase and catalase significantly reduced PA contractility in the OXR and OX24 groups, but not in the RAR group. Conclusions: We conclude that ventilated premature lambs are unable to appropriately increase AOE activity in response to hyperoxia and that increasing exposure to oxygen aggravates systemic oxidant stress, oxidant lung injury and pulmonary arterial contractility in these lambs.


Pediatric Research | 2010

Exposure to supplemental oxygen and its effects on oxidative stress and antioxidant enzyme activity in term newborn lambs.

Vasanth H. Kumar; Anupama Patel; Daniel D. Swartz; Huamei Wang; Karen Wynn; Lori Nielsen; Rita M. Ryan

The optimal oxygen concentration for the resuscitation of term infants remains controversial. We studied the effects of 21 versus 100% oxygen immediately after birth, and also exposure for 24 h to 100% oxygen, on oxidant lung injury and lung antioxidant enzyme (AOE) activities in term newborn lambs. Lambs at 139 d gestation were delivered and ventilated with 21% (RAR) or 100% (OXR) for 30 min. A third group of newborn lambs were ventilated with 100% O2 for 24 h (OX24). Oxidized glutathione levels in whole blood were significantly different among the groups with lower values in the RAR group, and these values correlated highly with partial pressure of arterial oxygen (Pao2). The reduced to oxidized glutathione ratio was significantly different among the groups, the ratio decreasing with increasing oxygen exposure. Lipid hydroperoxide (LPO) activity was significantly higher in the OXR and OX24 groups. AOE activity was higher in the whole lung and in red cell lysate in the OX24 group. Increased myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity, percent neutrophils, and proteins in lung lavage suggested inflammation in the OX24 group after maximal oxygen exposure. We conclude that even relatively brief exposure of the lung to 100% oxygen increases systemic oxidative stress and lung oxidant injury in ventilated term newborn lambs.


Life Sciences | 2000

Effects of salmeterol on secretion of phosphatidylcholine by alveolar type II cells.

Vasanth H. Kumar; Constance P. Christian; Mitchell J. Kresch

Beta-adrenergic agents enhance secretion of phosphatidylcholine (PC) by adult and fetal type II cells. We have previously shown that terbutaline stimulates secretion of PC by fetal type II cells, but the response wanes after 30 minutes. We studied the effects of salmeterol, a highly selective, long-acting beta2-adrenergic agonist that does not cause receptor desensitization, on PC secretion by adult type II alveolar cells in primary culture. Release of lactate-dehydrogenase was < 4% and did not vary with the concentration of salmeterol. Salmeterol stimulated PC secretion in a concentration-dependent manner. The maximum effective-concentration tested was 50 nM and the EC50 was 11.40 +/- 1.14 nM. Propranolol inhibited the effect of salmeterol on release of PC, confirming that the effects of salmeterol are mediated by beta-receptors. OT50, the time for onset of action, was 32.0 +/- 1.6 minutes. RT50, the time to achieve 50% recovery from maximal stimulation was, 393.0 +/- 20.2 minutes. We conclude that salmeterol stimulates PC secretion by type II cells through activation of beta-adrenergic receptors and has a longer duration of action (>6 hours) compared to other beta2-agonists. Salmeterol may be a useful drug with which to study the role of receptor desensitization in the developmental changes in PC secretion.

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Rita M. Ryan

Medical University of South Carolina

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Daniel D. Swartz

State University of New York System

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Robin H. Steinhorn

Children's National Medical Center

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James A. Russell

University of British Columbia

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