• J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Aug 2012

    The pumpless extracorporeal lung membrane provides complete respiratory support during complex airway reconstructions without inducing cellular trauma or a coagulatory and inflammatory response.

    • David Sanchez-Lorente, Manuela Iglesias, Alberto Rodríguez, Philipp Jungebluth, and Paolo Macchiarini.
    • Department of General Thoracic Surgery Hospital Clínic, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain.
    • J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2012 Aug 1; 144 (2): 425-30.

    ObjectiveOur objective was to investigate the capacity of a pumpless extracorporeal lung membrane (iLA) (Novalung; Novalung GmbH, Hechingen, Germany) to provide adequate respiratory support and the impact on morbidity/mortality during complex airway reconstruction.MethodsOnly patients unable to be ventilated via conventional intubation were eligible for the study. A larynx mask or orotracheal tubes were placed above the airway defect and the iLA was attached via femoral vessels (arteriovenous), providing extracorporeal gas exchange, apneic hyperoxygenation, and total tubeless airway reconstruction. Haptoglobulin, plasmin-antiplasmin complex, P-selectin activation, and interleukin 6 were measured before, during, and after iLA use and 72 hours postoperatively.ResultsFifteen consecutive patients (age, 42±17 years) underwent elective (n=7) or emergency (n=8) reconstruction of the airway owing to a variety of disorders or defects. The iLA was left in place for 185±61 minutes, diverted 1.70±0.48 L/min of the cardiac output, and provided an arteriovenous carbon dioxide removal and oxygen transfer of 173±94 and 144±83 mL/min, respectively. The arterial oxygen tension/inspired oxygen fraction (314±31 mm Hg), and arterial carbon dioxide tension (40±6 mm Hg) remained stable throughout the entire operations. The following procedures were performed: redo slide tracheoplasties (n=3), redo tracheoesophageal fistula repair (n=1), sleeve lobectomies (n=2), main carina reconstructions (n=7), and anastomotic stenting and myocutaneous coverages (n=2). Three patients required prolonged (9±2 days) postoperative iLA support. Two (13%) patients died during the hospital stay. The use of iLA was associated with significant (P<.05) but clinically nonrelevant and yet nonpathologic increases of haptoglobulin (hemolysis), plasmin-antiplasmin complex (coagulation activation), and P-selectin activation (platelet activation). Data normalized within 48 hours postoperatively.ConclusionsData suggest that iLA provides complete intraoperative respiratory support in patients who cannot receive conventional intubation/ventilation without relevant effects on cellular trauma, coagulatory response, and inflammatory response.Copyright © 2012 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.

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