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The original Lee paper discussed air in the vessels originating from damage to the lungs. These cases occurred during a period of time before artificial lung surfactant was available, which meant that preemie lungs were very stiff and stuck closed. In order to move enough air for the baby to have hope of living, very high pressures were used and as a side effect this caused damage to the lungs, including the kind of damage that allowed air pushed into the lungs to be pushed into the blood from the capillaries in the lungs.
This sort of damage is unheard of now and would have been for decades. Certainly no baby at Chester would or should have experienced anything like it, full stop. Certainly no baby at Chester could be said to have had a collapse caused by precisely the same mechanism as described in the paper. (And a baby in the condition described by the paper who did have a collapse would have been completely expected. Those kids were truly on the verge of death at every moment. Absolutely the opposite of the babies at Chester. )
I don't know how much of this would have been discussed at trial because it is not relevant to the case. But I believe that any of the neonatal or pediatric doctors involved in the case and in the trial would have been aware of this history of lung destructive ventilation, and the older doctors might even have had personal experience with it. So they would have had a shared understanding of the context of the paper.
JMO
This sort of damage is unheard of now and would have been for decades. Certainly no baby at Chester would or should have experienced anything like it, full stop. Certainly no baby at Chester could be said to have had a collapse caused by precisely the same mechanism as described in the paper. (And a baby in the condition described by the paper who did have a collapse would have been completely expected. Those kids were truly on the verge of death at every moment. Absolutely the opposite of the babies at Chester. )
I don't know how much of this would have been discussed at trial because it is not relevant to the case. But I believe that any of the neonatal or pediatric doctors involved in the case and in the trial would have been aware of this history of lung destructive ventilation, and the older doctors might even have had personal experience with it. So they would have had a shared understanding of the context of the paper.
JMO