1. Ultrasound-guided versus blind vascular access followed by REBOA on board of a medical helicopter in a hemorrhagic ovine model.
- Author
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Reva, Viktor A., Perevedentcev, Andrey V., Pochtarnik, Alexander A., Khupov, Murat T., Kalinina, Angelina A., Samokhvalov, Igor M., and Khan, Mansoor A.
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CENTRAL venous catheterization , *INTRA-aortic balloon counterpulsation , *BALLOON occlusion , *SURGICAL arteriovenous shunts , *INTRAVENOUS catheterization , *SYSTOLIC blood pressure , *HEMORRHAGE treatment , *HEMORRHAGIC shock treatment , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *SHEEP , *AMBULANCES , *ANIMAL experimentation , *HEMORRHAGIC shock , *CATHETERIZATION , *AORTA , *RESUSCITATION - Abstract
Background: The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of en-route resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) on board of a helicopter.Methods: Six sedated male sheep (weighing 42-54 kg) underwent a controlled hemorrhage until the systolic blood pressure (BP) dropped to <90 mmHg, and were placed into a low capacity Eurocopter AS-350 (France). During the 30-minutes normal flight, every animal underwent blind (left side) and ultrasound-guided (US) (right side) vascular access (VA) to the femoral artery followed by REBOA: the first catheter (Rescue balloon, Japan) - into Zone I, the second one (MIT, Russia) - Zone III. In case of blind VA failure, an alternate US-puncture was attempted. Six experienced flight anesthetists were enrolled into the study. Vascular access and REBOA catheter placement (confirmed by X-Ray later) success rate and timing were recorded.Results: Among six blind punctures one was successful, 2/6 - were into the vein, 3/6 - completely failed and switched to US-punctures (making total number of US-punctures nine). Eight out of nine US-punctures were successful. However, correct wire insertion and sheath placement was performed in 1/6 animal in the 'blind' group and only in 6/9 animals in the 'US' group. It took a median of 65 seconds (range 5-260) for US-puncture and a median of 4 minutes to get the sheath in. Among the 9 VAs, there were 2 REBOA failures (1 ruptured balloon [MIT] and 1 mistaken vena cava placement primarily recognized by a sudden drop of BP and later confirmed by X-Ray). Five out of seven balloons were placed in a desired intra-aortic position: 4/5 in Zone I and 1/2 - in Zone III. A median time for a successful REBOA procedure was 5.0 (range 2.5-10.0) minutes (1 min after sheath placement).Conclusion: Our study demonstrates the potential feasibility of the en-route REBOA which can be performed within 5 minutes. Ultrasound-guidance is critically important to achieve en-route VA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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