| Literature DB >> 36079170 |
Sharon Bruoha1, Chaim Yosefy1, Louay Taha2, Danny Dvir2, Mony Shuvy2,3, Rami Jubeh2, Shemy Carasso2,4, Michael Glikson2,3, Elad Asher2.
Abstract
Cardiogenic shock complicating acute myocardial infarction is a complex clinical condition associated with dismal prognosis. Routine early target vessel revascularization remains the most effective treatment to substantially improve outcomes, but mortality remains high. Temporary circulatory support devices have emerged with the aim to enhance cardiac unloading and improve end-organ perfusion. However, quality evidence to guide device selection, optimal installation timing, and post-implantation management are scarce, stressing the importance of multidisciplinary expert care. This review focuses on the contemporary use of short-term support devices in the setting of cardiogenic shock following acute myocardial infarction, including the common challenges associated this practice.Entities:
Keywords: acute myocardial infarction; cardiogenic shock; mechanical circulatory support
Year: 2022 PMID: 36079170 PMCID: PMC9457021 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11175241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Shock stages: description and hemodynamics.
| Stage | Description | Hemodynamics | Biochemical Markers |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | No signs or symptoms of CS but at risk for CS development. May include patients with large acute myocardial infarction. | Normotensive (SBP ≥ 100 or normal for patient) | Normal labs |
| B | A patient who has clinical evidence of relative hypotension or tachycardia without hypoperfusion. | SBP <90 | - Normal lactate |
| C | A patient that manifests with hypoperfusion that requires intervention (inotrope, pressor, or mechanical support, including ECMO) beyond volume resuscitation to restore perfusion. These patients typically present with relative hypotension. | May include any of: | May include any of the following: |
| D | A patient that is similar to category C but is getting worse. They have failure to respond to initial interventions. | Any of Stage C | Any of Stage C and: Deteriorating |
| E | A patient that is experiencing cardiac arrest with ongoing CPR and/or ECMO being supported by multiple interventions. | No SBP without resuscitation PEA or refractory VT/VF hypotension despite maximal support | “Trying to die” |
Figure 1Schematic drawing of commercially available left ventricular percutaneous mechanical support devices. (a) Intra-aortic balloon pump, (b) Impella, (c)TandemHeart, and (d) Veno-arterial (VA) extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO).
Characteristics of short-term mechanical circulatory support devices.
| Device | IABP | Impella (2.5, CP, 5.0, 5.5, ECP) | TendemHeart | Impella RP | TendemHeart RA-PA | VA-ECMO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flow | - | 2.5–5.5 L/min | Max 4 L/min | Max 4 L/min | Max 4 L/min | Max 7 L/min |
| Pump speed | - | Max | Max | Max | Max | Max |
| Mechanism | Cardiac cycle timed balloon inflation-deflation | Axial flow continuous pump (LV to Ao) | Centrifugal flow continuous pump (LA to Ao) | Axial flow continuous pump (RA to PA) | Centrifugal flow continuous pump | Centrifugal flow continuous pump (RA to Ao) |
| Cannula size | 7–8F | 9–14F | 12–19F | 22F | 29F | 14–19F arterial |
| Insertion | Femoral artery | Femoral artery | Femoral | Femoral vein | Internal jugular vein | Femoral vein |
| LV unloading | + | + to +++ | ++ | − | − | − |
| RV unloading | − | − | - | + | + | ++ |
| Cardiac power | − | ↑↑ | ↑↑ | - | - | ↑↑ |
| Afterload | ↓ | ↓↓ | ↑ | - | - | ↑↑ |
| Coronary perfusion | ↑ | ↑ | - | - | - | - |
| Complications | Cannula migration from LA to RA, tamponade, stroke, limb ischemia | Bleeding, hemolysis, vascular injuries, stroke, aortic valve injury | Dislodging of cannula, limb ischemia, femoral arteriovenous fistula, thromboembolism | Bleeding, hemolysis, vascular injuries, RV perforation, arrhythmia | Dislodging of cannula, vascular injury | Bleeding, thromboembolism, limb ischemia, renal failure, infections (including access site) lung edema, bleeding and hemoptysis |
| Contraindications | Severe aortic regurgitation, severe peripheral vascular disease precluding use | Severe peripheral vascular disease precluding use, LV thrombus, mechanical aortic valve, severe RV failure, aortic valve orifice area of 0.6 cm2 or less | Ventricular septal defect, significant aortic regurgitation | Inferior vena cava filter, severe tricuspis and/or pulmonic valve stenosis, mechanical right sided valves, thrombi in vena cava, right atrium | Ventricular septal defect | Expected lack of benefit (short life expectancy, terminal illness) |
On-going MCS trials in CS patients.
| Study | Description | Sample Size | Primary Endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|
| Study on Early Intra-aortic Balloon Pump Placement in Acute Decompensated Heart Failure Complicated by Cardiogenic Shock (Altshock-2) | Patients will be randomized 1:1 to early IABP (within six hours of onset of cardiogenic shock) versus standard of care (vasoactive therapy). | 200 | 60-day patients’ survival or successful bridge to heart replacement therapy. |
| Danish-German Cardiogenic Shock Trial (DanGer Shock) | Patients will be randomized to receive conventional circulatory support or support with the Impella CP device for a minimum of 48 h and inotropic support if needed. | 360 | All-cause mortality |
| Acute Impact of the Impella CP Assist Device in Pts. With Cardiogenic Shock on the Patients Hemodynamic (JenaMACS) | Assessment of the acute hemodynamic effects following implantation of the IMPELLA CP cardiac support device | 20 | Surrogate endpoint |
| Impella CP With VA ECMO for Cardiogenic Shock (REVERSE) | VA-ECMO with Impella CP (LV venting) versus VA-ECMO alone in cardiogenic shock. | 96 | Surrogate endpoint |
| Transient Circulatory Support in Cardiogenic Shock (ALLOASSIST) | Transient circulatory support (VA-ECMO, Impella) vs. standard therapy. | 240 | In-hospital mortality (from inclusion day to day 180) |
| Assessment of ECMO in Acute Myocardial Infarction Cardiogenic Shock (ANCHOR) | VA-ECMO via the femoral route, with IABP in the contralateral femoral artery versus ESC guidelines management. (i.e., no devices). | 400 | Treatment failure at 30 days: Death in the ECMO group and death OR rescue ECMO in the control group |
| Extracorporeal Life Support in Cardiogenic Shock (ECLS-SHOCK) | Extracorporeal life support and revascularization (PCI or CABG; ECLS insertion should be performed preferably before revascularization) versus revascularization alone. | 420 | 30-day mortality |
| ExtraCorporeal Membrane Oxygenation in the Therapy of Cardiogenic Shock (ECMO-CS) | VA-ECMO versus control in cardiogenic shock complicating myocardial infarction. | 120 | Composite of death from any cause, resuscitated circulatory arrest, and implantation of another mechanical circulatory support device within 30 days |
| Testing the Value of Novel Strategy and Its Cost Efficacy in Order to Improve the Poor Outcomes in Cardiogenic Shock (EUROSHOCK) | Early intervention with ECMO therapy vs. standard treatment (no ECMO). | 428 | All-cause mortality |
| ECMOsorb Trial-Impact of a VA-ECMO in Combination With CytoSorb in Critically Ill Patients With Cardiogenic Shock (ECMOsorb) | VA-ECMO and CytoSorb (An extracorporeal cytokine hemoadsorption system is integrated in the VA-ECMO circuit) vs. VA-ECMO without CytoSorb. | 54 | Surrogate endpoint |