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Rescue extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in children with refractory cardiac arrest

Authors :
Eva Maria Delmo Walter
Matthias Redlin
Felix Berger
Vladimir Alexi-Meskishvili
Roland Hetzer
Wolfgang Boettcher
Michael Huebler
Yuguo Weng
Source :
Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery. 12(6)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

We describe our experience with extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) using extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in children with refractory cardiac arrest, and determine predictors for mortality. ECMO support was instituted on 42 children, median age 0.7 years (1 day-17.8 years), median weight 7.05 (range 2.7-80) kg who suffered refractory cardiac arrest (1992-2008). Patients were postcardiotomy (n=27), or had uncorrected congenital heart diseases (n=3), cardiomyopathy (n=3), myocarditis (n=2), respiratory failure (n=3), or had trauma (n=4). Cannulation site was the chest in all except for three neonates who were cannulated through the neck vessels and two children who had femoral cannulation. ECMO was successfully discontinued in 17 patients. Primary cause of mortality was neurological injury. Pre-ECMO CPR duration for survivors against those who died was a mean of 35±1.3 min vs. a mean of 46±4.2 min. Age, weight, sex, anatomic diagnosis, etiology (surgical vs. medical) were not significant predictors of poor outcome. Prolonged CPR and high-dose inotropes are significant predictors of mortality. Rescue ECMO support in children with refractory cardiac arrest can achieve acceptable survival and neurological outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
15699285
Volume :
12
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d68a47e712a5a7c2d182050f86f03325