Combined Use of ECMO, Prone Positioning, and APRV in the Management of Severe COVID-19 Patients.

IF 0.9 Q4 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM Clinical Medicine Insights-Circulatory Respiratory and Pulmonary Medicine Pub Date : 2022-11-17 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1177/11795484221134451
Stephanie L Ong, Hossam Tantawy, Roland Assi, Astha Chichra, Miriam M Treggiari
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background: Severe COVID-19-associated Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) may warrant extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). We evaluated the safety and physiologic changes in oxygenation and hemodynamic profile during ECMO, prone positioning, and the two modalities combined in patients receiving veno-venous (VV) ECMO.

Methods: Cohort study of consecutive adult patients with COVID-19-associated ARDS requiring VV-ECMO, classified into three groups: ECMO support only; Prone positioning only; and Prone positioning during ECMO. We collected hemodynamic, respiratory and ventilation variables as follows: pre-treatment, 1, 6, and 24 h post-treatment, and documented treatment-related complications. On-treatment variables were compared with pre-treatment using one-sample paired t-test with Bonferroni correction.

Results: Fourteen patients (mean age 48.1 [SD 9.3] years, male [100%]) received VV-ECMO. Of those, 10 patients had data during prone positioning alone and seven had data while proned on ECMO. While on ECMO, patients had improvement in oxygen saturation, PaO2/FiO2 ratio, and minute ventilation up to 24 h post-treatment. Vasopressor requirements increased with ECMO at 1 h and 24 h post-treatment. Prone positioning was not associated with clinically significant hemodynamic or respiratory changes, either alone or during ECMO support. All patients sustained deep tissue injuries, but only those on the face or chest were related to prone positioning. Three patients required cannula replacement. In-hospital mortality was 43%.

Conclusions: VV-ECMO and prone positioning in patients with COVID-19 ARDS was overall well-tolerated; however, physiologic improvements were marginal, and patients sustained deep tissue injuries. Although this was a selected population with high mortality, our data call into question the benefits of these management modalities in this severe COVID-19 population.

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ECMO、俯卧位和APRV联合应用于重症COVID-19患者的治疗
背景:covid -19相关的严重急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)可能需要体外膜氧合(ECMO)。我们评估了接受静脉-静脉(VV) ECMO的患者在ECMO、俯卧位和两种方式联合时氧合和血流动力学特征的安全性和生理变化。方法:对需要VV-ECMO的连续成年covid -19相关ARDS患者进行队列研究,分为三组:仅支持ECMO;仅俯卧位;ECMO时俯卧位。我们收集血流动力学、呼吸和通气变量如下:治疗前、治疗后1、6和24小时,并记录治疗相关并发症。采用单样本配对t检验和Bonferroni校正对治疗前变量进行比较。结果:14例患者(平均年龄48.1 [SD 9.3]岁,男性[100%])接受VV-ECMO。其中,10名患者仅俯卧位时有数据,7名患者俯卧位时有数据。在ECMO时,患者的血氧饱和度、PaO2/FiO2比以及治疗后24 h的分钟通气均有改善。ECMO治疗后1 h和24 h血管加压素需要量增加。俯卧位与临床显著的血流动力学或呼吸变化无关,无论是单独还是在ECMO支持期间。所有患者均有深部组织损伤,但只有面部或胸部的损伤与俯卧位有关。3例患者需要更换套管。住院死亡率为43%。结论:VV-ECMO和俯卧位对COVID-19 ARDS患者总体耐受良好;然而,生理上的改善是边际的,患者持续深层组织损伤。尽管这是一个高死亡率的精选人群,但我们的数据对这些管理模式在这一严重的COVID-19人群中的益处提出了质疑。
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4.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
8 weeks
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