| Literature DB >> 30084076 |
Carsten Tschöpe1,2,3, Sophie Van Linthout4,5,6, Oliver Klein5,6, Thomas Mairinger7, Florian Krackhardt4, Evgenij V Potapov6,8, Gunther Schmidt4, Daniel Burkhoff9, Burkert Pieske4,6,10, Frank Spillmann4,6.
Abstract
Mechanical circulatory support (MCS) is often required to stabilize patients with acute fulminant myocarditis with cardiogenic shock. This review gives an overview of the successful use of left-sided Impella in the setting of fulminant myocarditis and cardiogenic shock as the sole means of MCS as well as in combination with right ventricular (RV) support devices including extracorporeal life support (ECLS) (ECMELLA) or an Impella RP (BI-PELLA). It further provides evidence from endomyocardial biopsies that in addition to giving adequate support, LV unloading by Impella exhibits disease-modifying effects important for myocardial recovery (i.e., bridge-to-recovery) achieved by this newly termed "prolonged Impella" (PROPELLA) concept in which LV-IMPELLA 5.0, implanted via an axillary approach, provides support in awake, mobilized patients for several weeks. Finally, this review addresses the question of how to define the appropriate time point for weaning strategies and for changing or discontinuing unloading in fulminant myocarditis.Entities:
Keywords: Endomyocardial biopsies; Fulminant myocarditis; MALDI-imaging mass spectrometry; Mechanical circulatory support; Mechanical unloading; Metabolism; Weaning
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30084076 PMCID: PMC6497621 DOI: 10.1007/s12265-018-9820-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Transl Res ISSN: 1937-5387 Impact factor: 4.132
Fig. 1Impella-induced left ventricle venting under ECLS treatment: Concept of ECMELLA—left ventricle unloading. Left panel: invasive LV hemodynamic measurements under veno-arterial (v.a.) extracorporeal life support (ECLS) support indicate highly increased LV end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) of 51 mmHg. Right panel: invasive LV hemodynamic measurements under ECMELLA concept illustrates immediate lowering of LVEDP to 43 mmHg already 50 s after onset
Fig. 2Chest X-ray of a BI-PELLA approach of a patient from our clinic with endomyocardial biopsy-proven severe fulminant myocarditis and biventricular decompensation. RV-Impella RP implanted into the right A. pulmonalis; LV-Impella CP implanted into the left ventricle
Fig. 3Impact of prolonged mechanical unloading on cardiac immune cell infiltration in chronic inflammatory cardiomyopathy (PROPELLA concept). Upper (× 100 magnification) and lower (× 200 magnification) panels depict hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections of endomyocardial biopsies isolated before (T0), during combined unloading and immune suppression (T1, T2) and after Impella explantation (T3). Unloading combined with immune suppression (T1, T2) decreases the extensive immune cell infiltration found at T0. However, after explantation of the Impella, immune cell infiltration is again prominent (T3)
Fig. 4Impact of prolonged mechanical unloading on cardiac metabolism in chronic inflammatory cardiomyopathy (PROPELLA concept). The intensity distribution of malate dehydrogenase, mitochondrial (1164 Da) is significantly increased during combined unloading and immune suppression (T1, T2) compared to before (T0) and after unloading (T3) implantation. Lower panel illustrates the corresponding box plot