SUMMARY Title: Optimal Oxygenation in Neonatal Lung Injury The current guidelines for neonatal resuscitation recommend the use of 21% oxygen during initial resuscitation of term newborn infants and use of blended supplemental oxygen to maintain target saturations to provide adequate oxygen while limiting damage from reactive oxygen radicals. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends maintaining PaO2 between 50 and 80 mmHg in the management of sick neonates. These recommendations are based on studies using oxygen saturations in human infants and through translational studies in neonatal animal models without lung disease. Optimal oxygen concentration and target oxygen saturation range during resuscitation and ventilation of term neonates with lung injury/disease has been tested by this lab in term newborn lambs. SPO2 is not the sole determinant of oxygenation. When considering treatment that focuses on protecting brain function following birth with meconium aspiration/asphyxia, the same treatment may compromise pulmonary function. Transition to air breathing is a complex physiologic event, more so when there is significant lung disease. To further minimize the impact of oxygen damage we propose to study term lambs with lung injury induced by aspiration of meconium during gasping respirations as a consequence of umbilical cord occlusion and asphyxia (“asphyxia-MAS”). Limiting optimal target oxygen levels to two groups, 90-94% and 95-99% (that were found to be best treatment conditions during past studies) we propose to study 3 additional specific aims to improve both brain and lung function. The first specific aim will evaluate the hemoglobin level that optimizes cerebral O2 delivery and extraction, achieved by improving placental transfusion at birth using cord milking procedures that increase circulating fetal RBC’s. The second aim will randomize the target PaCO2 and pH to provide the best cerebral blood flow while maintaining low pulmonary vascular resistance, continually managed by monitoring end-tidal CO2. The last specific aim will study the influence of hypothermia treatment currently used clinically following asphyxial birth to preserve brain function. Many factors can influence newborn clinical management of lung disease. We intend to clarify management criteria to better control the factors that influence hemodynamic measures of blood flow, pulmonary artery pressure and gas exchange to optimize oxygen delivery and extraction for both brain and lung function while limiting damage from oxygen free radicals.