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Critically ill patients often succumb to acute respiratory disease (rapidly developing disease affecting the lungs). The lungs are the commonest organ to fail and require support in the intensive care environment. However, no accurate methods exist that can be used at the bedside to tell what is causing deterioration in a person's lungs. There are various examples of acute respiratory diseases that can occur as a result of numerous different causes, have a high risk of death and cannot be treated easily with drugs. When trying to accurately diagnose and classify these lung diseases there is a risk that the type of respiratory disease is misdiagnosed, missed or the level of severity is not captured. By using the field of optical molecular imaging and employing novel techniques and technologies, the investigators hope to demonstrate here that a bespoke chemical probe administered in micro doses (tiny doses) directly into the distal lung can rapidly and accurately detect activated neutrophils (cells of the immune system that are implicated in the development of these severe conditions), and so work towards a bedside test which could be used to diagnose, monitor and classify the disease in patients who are critically ill in the future. The population for this study are in intensive care where patients are normally intubated (have a breathing tube) due to the severity of their illness, this may be because of respiratory problems or respiratory problems can rapidly develop. Participants will have the chemical probe administered into their lungs and pictures taken through the tube already in place. As this probe lights up when it comes into contact with neutrophils the investigators will be able to tell if neutrophils are present. This will inform a larger study in which it's hoped that the method can be used to inform clinical decisions. The first procedure will take place within two days of initiation of mechanical ventilation and the direct contact with the study team will be completed within nine days.
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Inclusion criteria
For all participants:
For BAL subset (up to a total of 10 participants)
Permission given to undertake a BAL by independent attending consultant
CONTROL BAL (n=5)
o Absence of pulmonary infiltrates on the aforementioned chest radiological imaging
ABNORMAL BAL (n=5)
Exclusion criteria
For enrolment into the study:
Prior to each study blood sampling • Haemoglobin (Hb) < 6.5 g/dL.
Prior to each BAL
• Refusal to permit BAL by the participants attending consultant
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
11 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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