ASAIO journal : a peer-reviewed journal of the American Society for Artificial Internal Organs
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Systemic infusion of unfractionated heparin (UFH) is the standard anticoagulation technique for continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) during extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), but often fails to avoid CRRT circuit clotting. The aim of this study was to assess, in patients undergoing CRRT during venovenous ECMO (vv-ECMO), the efficacy and safety of adding regional citrate anticoagulation (RCA) for CRRT circuit anticoagulation (RCA + UFH group) compared with the sole systemic heparin anticoagulation (UFH group). We performed a retrospective chart review (2009-2018) of patients treated with CRRT during ECMO. ⋯ No complication ascribable to citrate anticoagulation was recorded. Regional citrate anticoagulation resulted a feasible, safe, and effective technique as additional anticoagulation for CRRT circuits during ECMO. Compared with systemic heparinization only, this technique allowed to reduce the rate of CRRT circuit clotting.
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Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is a low-volume, high-risk modality of care. Clinical specialists (CS) who manage ECMO circuit emergencies vary in background and approach to circuit emergencies based on institutional training standards, leading to variation that may impact the quality of care. Validated checklists to assess CS performance are crucial to eliminate disparities and improve efficiency. ⋯ A Cronbach's α of 0.74 during the second round of responses indicated an acceptable degree of agreement. This study demonstrated content validation of three ECMO emergency checklists to assess performance of ECMO CS using a consensus-based Delphi technique. Future validity evidence should be acquired by implementing these checklists in the simulation environments.
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To balance the risk of bleeding versus circuit thrombosis during extracorporeal life support (ECLS), it is important to monitor anticoagulants and hemostasis. We evaluated the prothrombin time (PT), partial thromboplastin time (PTT), activated clotting time (ACT), and antifactor Xa heparin activity (aXa) correlation with changes in coagulation factor and heparin levels using in vitro and in vivo samples. aXa correlated with heparin (r = 0.97) and antithrombin (r = 0.98) but was unaffected by other parameters. PT correlated with coagulation factors (r = 0.88) but was minimally affected by heparin or other parameters. ⋯ In conclusion, aXa is the most specific for heparin levels, and PT is most specific for coagulation factor levels making these assays well suited to monitor anticoagulation and hemostasis for patients on ECLS. PTT is highly variable when multiple parameters are changing in vitro and in vivo, but may be useful when aXa cannot be used because of interference. ACT is too insensitive to heparin, sensitive to too many other factors, and too imprecise to be useful for monitoring hemostasis during ECLS.
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Effective strategies to optimize Interagency Registry for Mechanically Assisted Circulatory Support (INTERMACS 1) patients are in much need. A novel awake venous-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (aVA ECMO) allows for clinical assessments while temporarily supporting biventricular function and stabilizing end-organ functions. The aim of the study was to assess outcomes of patients with aVA ECMO support before durable left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation. ⋯ Survival of aVA ECMO patients was comparable with that of non-aVA ECMO INTERMACS 2 cohort (84.2% vs. 80.8%) at 1 year. Multivariate analysis demonstrated a significant reduction in the risk of death in aVA ECMO group compared with INTERMACS 1 non-aVA ECMO group (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.17; p = 0.035). Awake venous-arterial (VA) ECMO allows bridge to next therapy and improves outcomes in INTERMACS category 1 patients with an effect comparable with downgrading the disease severity on the INTERMACS scale.
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Peripheral veno-arterial extra corporeal life support (V-A ECLS) is an effective tool in treating refractory cardiogenic shock (RCS). Despite additional use of intra-aortic balloon pump, insufficient left ventricular unloading is a likely complication. We present herein our experience combining V-A ECLS and Impella to treat symptomatic, critical patients. ⋯ Factors including diabetes, patients aged over 60 years, surgery using extracorporeal circulation, adrenalin infusion, acute myocardial infarction, and chronic HFrEF are associated with day-30 mortality. Chronic HFrEF was an independent risk factor for the day-30 mortality [hazard ratio = 5.28 (1.38-20.21), P = 0.015]. Impella and V-A ECLS combination is a promising association for critical patients presenting symptomatic insufficient LV unloading, for weaning V-A ECLS or testing the right ventricle before a switch to left ventricle assist device support.