| Literature DB >> 30996633 |
Guo-Qiang Jing1, Jie Li2,3, Bing Sun3, Huiwen Chu3, Haichao Li3, Xue Wang3, Xiao Tang3.
Abstract
This case study describes a 59-year-old male with a body mass index of 14.4 kg/m2 and a diagnosis of interstitial lung disease, pneumoconiosis, and severe pulmonary hypertension who received a bilateral lung transplant in a hospital in mainland China. Veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) was initiated before the lung transplant; in addition, an emergency thoracotomy was performed three hours afterwards due to uncontrolled bleeding. VA-ECMO was weaned 34 hours later, but weaning from the ventilator failed multiple times due to bilateral pneumothorax, weak neuromuscular drive, and muscle strength. A full, personalized rehabilitation program was initiated with the help of a respiratory therapy team and the physician, drawing on the American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society Statement on Pulmonary Rehabilitation. This included nutrition support, draining air from the chest pleural cavity, aggressive bronchial-hygiene therapy, a weaning plan, breathing and physical exercises, and psychological support. Eighty-one days after the tracheotomy, the patient was successfully weaned, decannulated, and discharged. A careful, ongoing evaluation and a personalized program assisted with weaning this difficult patient.Entities:
Keywords: lung transplantation; rehabilitation; severe malnutrition; weaning failure
Year: 2017 PMID: 30996633 PMCID: PMC6422215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Respir Ther ISSN: 1205-9838
FIGURE 1Chest CT on postoperative days 4, 11, 24, and 73 (from left to right). CT, computed tomography.
FIGURE 2Patient information timeline.