| Literature DB >> 32718340 |
Elliott Worku1,2, Denzil Gill3, Daniel Brodie4,5, Roberto Lorusso6, Alain Combes7,8, Kiran Shekar3,9,10,11.
Abstract
The use of extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) to restore circulation during cardiac arrest is a time-critical, resource-intensive intervention of unproven efficacy. The current COVID-19 pandemic has brought additional complexity and significant barriers to the ongoing provision and implementation of ECPR services. The logistics of patient selection, expedient cannulation, healthcare worker safety, and post-resuscitation care must be weighed against the ethical considerations of providing an intervention of contentious benefit at a time when critical care resources are being overwhelmed by pandemic demand.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32718340 PMCID: PMC7384274 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-020-03172-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Current models for ECPR provision in OHCA. In all comers with OHCA, the vast majority will be pronounced dead at scene or on arrival to hospital. a In select patients with refractory cardiac arrest, ECPR may be advocated; this demands consideration of the predominant arrest rhythm (shockable preferable), the presence of bystander CPR, and the logistics of cannulation, ICU capacity, and availability of services such as PCI to determine and treat potential aetiologies. b Expedient cannulation and establishment of extracorporeal perfusion is a requisite of an effective ECPR; for OHCA, this may occur: (i) on-scene cannulation by mobile ECMO practitioners and (ii) rapid retrieval to ECPR hospital
Fig. 2Possible management of the confirmed or suspected COVID-19-positive patient with OOHCA. a Bystander CCPR, with risk of aerosolisation and viral transmission: in many cases, this may not be performed on patients with known infectious status. b Ambulance service provides defibrillation and early airway securement to minimise aerosol generation. Time to don PPE and elevated system demands may delay attendance. In sustained non-shockable cardiac arrest, it may be appropriate to curtail resuscitation and avoid hospital transfer.c E-CPR if appropriate, in an isolated negative pressure environment with mechanical compressions. ECMO team should be in high-level PPE including PAPR. In non-ECPR centres, the patient may proceed to coronary angiography if appropriate intra-arrest or more typically post-ROSC. Inter-hospital transfer for ECPR or PCI would not be routine.d ICU admission is contingent upon patient prognosis and system capacity. It may be reasonable to admit only if ROSC has been achieved. Good neurological survival remains the desired outcome. Patients may receive TTM/hypothermia and ongoing mechanical circulatory support for an agreed duration. Outcomes include recovery, WLST, or brain death. Organ donation may only be considered in patients confirmed to be COVID-19 negative. CCPR, compression only CPR; PPE, personal protective equipment; TTM, targeted temperature management; WLST, withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy