Literature DB >> 28653554

The role of simulation to support donation after circulatory death with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (DCD-ECMO).

Mateusz Puślecki1,2, Marcin Ligowski2, Marek Dąbrowski1,3, Maciej Sip1, Sebastian Stefaniak2, Tomasz Kłosiewicz1, Łukasz Gąsiorowski3,4,5, Marek Karczewski1,6, Tomasz Małkiewicz7,8, Małgorzata Ładzińska2, Marcin Zieliński1,8, Aleksander Pawlak8, Bartłomiej Perek2, Michael Czekajlo3,9,10, Marek Jemielity2.   

Abstract

Maintaining the viability of organs from donors after circulatory death (DCD) for transplantation is a complicated procedure, from a time perspective in the absence of appropriate organizational capabilities, that makes such transplantation cases difficult and not yet widespread in Poland. We present the procedural preparation for Poland's first case of organ (kidney) transplantation from a DCD donor in which perfusion was supported by extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Because this organizational model is complex and expensive, we used advanced high-fidelity medical simulation to prepare for the real-life implementation. The real time scenario included all crucial steps: prehospital identification, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), advanced life support (ALS); perfusion therapy (CPR-ECMO or DCD-ECMO); inclusion and exclusion criteria matching, suitability for automated chest compression; DCD confirmation and donor authorization, ECMO organs recovery; kidney harvesting. The success of our first simulated DCD-ECMO procedure in Poland is reassuring. Soon after this simulation, Maastricht category II DCD procedures were performed, involving real patients and resulting in two successful double kidney transplantations. During debriefing, it was found that the previous simulation-based training provided the experience to build a successful procedural chain, to eliminate errors at the stage of identification, notification, transportation, donor qualifications and ECMO organ perfusion to create DCD-ECMO algorithm architecture.

Entities:  

Keywords:  DCD; ECMO; donors after circulatory death; organ recovery; perfusion

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28653554     DOI: 10.1177/0267659117716533

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Perfusion        ISSN: 0267-6591            Impact factor:   1.972


  3 in total

1.  Prototype of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) therapy simulator used in regional ECMO program.

Authors:  Mateusz Puslecki; Marcin Ligowski; Michal Kiel; Marek Dabrowski; Sebastian Stefaniak; Maciej Sip; Adrian Maciejewski; Agata Dabrowska; Ilona Kiel-Puslecka; Tomasz Kłosiewicz; Marcin Misterski; Piotr Buczkowski; Lukasz Szarpak; Kurt Ruetzler; Bartlomiej Perek; Michael Czekajlo; Marek Jemielity
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2018-08       Impact factor: 2.895

Review 2.  The role of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in patients after irreversible cardiac arrest as potential organ donors.

Authors:  Tomasz Kłosiewicz; Mateusz Puślecki; Marcin Zieliński; Michał Mandecki; Marcin Ligowski; Sebastian Stefaniak; Marek Dąbrowski; Marek Karczewski; Łukasz Gąsiorowski; Maciej Sip; Agata Dąbrowska; Wojciech Telec; Bartłomiej Perek; Marek Jemielity
Journal:  Kardiochir Torakochirurgia Pol       Date:  2017-12-20

3.  The use of prefilled adrenaline syringes improves cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality-high-fidelity simulator-based study.

Authors:  Radosław Zalewski; Mateusz Puślecki; Tomasz Kłosiewicz; Maciej Sip; Bartłomiej Perek
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2020-05       Impact factor: 3.005

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.