| Literature DB >> 22634172 |
Stephen Westaby, David Taggart.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22634172 PMCID: PMC3392688 DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2011-301365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart ISSN: 1355-6037 Impact factor: 5.994
Mechanical blood pumps currently used for the treatment of cardiogenic shock
| Device type | Pump name | Approximate duration of support | Approximate device cost per intervention |
| Percutaneous ECMO | Biomedicus Maquet Rotaflow Levitronix Centrimag | Days (3–28) | £6000–10 000 |
| Percutaneous LVAD | Impella Tandem heart | Days (3–7) | £10 000–15 000 |
| Temporary pulsatile VAD | Abiomed BVS 5000 Thoratec PVAD/IVAD Berlin excor | Weeks (1–26) | £20 000–25 000 |
| Temporary rotary VAD | Levitronix centrimag | Weeks (1–12) | £6000–8000 |
| Long-term pulsatile LVAD | Heartmate XVE | Months (3–24) | £60 000 |
| Long-term rotary LVAD | Micromed deBakey Jarvik 2000 Heartmate II Heartware (HVAD) Berlin incor Terumo Duraheart | Years (so far up to 8 years) | £60 000–80 000 |
| Total artificial heart | Syncardia | Months (bridge to transplant only) | £100 000 |
Rotary refers to axial or centrifugal continuous pumping mechanisms which provide non-pulsatile blood flow.
ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; VAD, ventricular assist device (LVAD or RVAD).
Figure 1Transport of a cardiogenic shock patient on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (courtesy of Prof. C Schmidt, University of Regensburg, Germany).