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- Nausherwan K Burki, Raj Kumar Mani, HerthFelix J FFJFThoraxklinik am Universitätsklinikum Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany., Werner Schmidt, Helmut Teschler, Frank Bonin, Heinrich Becker, Winfried J Randerath, Sven Stieglitz, Lars Hagmeyer, Christina Priegnitz, Michael Pfeifer, Stefan H Blaas, Christian Putensen, Nils Theuerkauf, Michael Quintel, and Onnen Moerer.
- University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT. Electronic address: nburki@uchc.edu.
- Chest. 2013 Mar 1; 143 (3): 678686678-686.
BackgroundHypercapnic respiratory failure in patients with COPD frequently requires mechanical ventilatory support. Extracorporeal CO2 removal (ECCO2R) techniques have not been systematically evaluated in these patients.MethodsThis is a pilot study of a novel ECCO2R device that utilizes a single venous catheter with high CO2 removal rates at low blood flows. Twenty hypercapnic patients with COPD received ECCO2R. Group 1 (n = 7) consisted of patients receiving noninvasive ventilation with a high likelihood of requiring invasive ventilation, group 2 (n = 2) consisted of patients who could not be weaned from noninvasive ventilation, and group 3 (n = 11) consisted of patients on invasive ventilation who had failed attempts to wean.ResultsThe device was well tolerated, with complications and rates similar to those seen with central venous catheterization. Blood flow through the system was 430.5 ± 73.7 mL/min, and ECCO2R was 82.5 ± 15.6 mL/min and did not change significantly with time. Invasive ventilation was avoided in all patients in group 1 and both patients in group 2 were weaned; PaCO2 decreased significantly (P < .003) with application of the device from 78.9 ± 16.8 mm Hg to 65.9 ± 11.5 mm Hg. In group 3, three patients were weaned, while the level of invasive ventilatory support was reduced in three patients. One patient in group 3 died due to a retroperitoneal bleed following catheterization.ConclusionsThis single-catheter, low-flow ECCO2R system provided clinically useful levels of CO2 removal in these patients with COPD. The system appears to be a potentially valuable additional modality for the treatment of hypercapnic respiratory failure.
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