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Critical Care Medicine:
May 2006 - Volume 34 - Issue 5 - pp 1372-1377
doi: 10.1097/01.CCM.0000215111.85483.BD
Clinical Investigations

A new pumpless extracorporeal interventional lung assist in critical hypoxemia/hypercapnia *

Bein, Thomas MD; Weber, Frank MD; Philipp, Alois ECCP; Prasser, Christopher MD; Pfeifer, Michael MD; Schmid, Franz-Xaver MD; Butz, Bernhard MD; Birnbaum, Dietrich MD; Taeger, Kai MD; Schlitt, Hans J. MD

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Abstract

Objective: Pump-driven extracorporeal gas exchange systems have been advocated in patients suffering from severe acute respiratory distress syndrome who are at risk for life-threatening hypoxemia and/or hypercapnia. This requires extended technical and staff support.

Design: We report retrospectively our experience with a new pumpless extracorporeal interventional lung assist (iLA) establishing an arteriovenous shunt as the driving pressure.

Setting: University hospital.

Patients: Ninety patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Interventions: Interventional lung assist was inserted in 90 patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Measurements and Main Results: Oxygenation improvement, carbon dioxide elimination, hemodynamic variables, and the amount of vasopressor substitution were reported before, 2 hrs after, and 24 hrs after implementation of the system. Interventional lung assist led to an acute and moderate increase in arterial oxygenation (Pao2/Fio2 ratio 2 hrs after initiation of iLA [median and interquartile range], 82 mm Hg [64–103]) compared with pre-iLA (58 mm Hg [47–78], p < .05). Oxygenation continued to improve for 24 hrs after implementation (101 mm Hg [74–142], p < .05). Hypercapnia was promptly and markedly reversed by iLA within 2 hrs (Paco2, 36 mm Hg [30–44]) in comparison with before (60 mm Hg [48–80], p < .05], which allowed a less aggressive ventilation. For hemodynamic stability, all patients received continuous norepinephrine infusion. The incidence of complications was 24.4%, mostly due to ischemia in a lower limb. Thirty-seven of 90 patients survived, creating a lower mortality rate than expected from the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score.

Conclusions: Interventional lung assist might provide a sufficient rescue measure with easy handling properties and low cost in patients with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome and persistent hypoxia/hypercapnia.

© 2006 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Lippincott Williams & Wilkins