E N D
1. Management of Infants requiring Venovenous ECMO Sixto F. Guiang, III
Dept. of Pediatrics
University of Minnesota
3. University of Michigan JAMA 2000;283:904-908
N= 1000
Newborns N=586
Survival 88%
MAS 98%
CDH 68%
Others 84-93%
90% veno-venous
9% IVH
4. VV ECMO Respiratory Mode for all ages
Infants 20% of all Respiratory ECMO
Approximately 800 cases / yr
Pediatric 28% of all Respiratory ECMO
Approximately 200 cases / yr
5. Pediatric VV ECMO Pediatr Crit Care Med 2003;4:291-298
Single Center 1991-2002
N = 82 ECMO for Respiratory Failure
Venovenous 83%
Venoarterial 17%
Unable to place VV 43%
6. Pediatric VV ECMO Venovenous
Dx
ARDS
RSV bronchiolitis
Penumonia
Outcomes
Lower degree of respiratory failure
Shorter ECMO (212 hour vs 350 hours)
Higher survival (81% vs. 64%)
7. Pediatric VV ECMO
9. Inclusion / Exclusion Guidelines- Same as VA age of at least 34 weeks
Weight >1.5-2.0 kg
Potentially reversible process
Absence of uncorrectable cardiac defect
Absence of major intracranial hemorrhage
Absence of uncorrectable coagulopathy
Absence of lethal anomaly
Absence of prolonged mechanical ventilation with high ventilatory settings
10. Oxygenation FailureCriteria - VA and VV Alveolar - arterial oxygen tension gradient
[760 - 47)-paCO2] - paO2
605 - 620 torr for greater than 4-12 hours
Oxygenation index
Mean Airway Pressure x FiO2 x 100/ paO2
> 35-60 for greater than 1-6 hours
11. Oxygenation FailureCriteria - VA and VV paO2
PaO2 < 35 for 2 hours
paO2 < 50 for 12 hours
Acute decompensation
paO2 < 30 torr
12. Myocardial Failure - VA Only Refractory hypotension
Low cardiac output
pH <7.25 for 2 hours or greater
Uncontrolled metabolic acidosis secondary to hemodynamic insufficiency
Cardiac arrest - CPR
13. Additional Exclusion Criteria - Venovenous ECMO Severe LV dysfunction
Severe hypotension
Cannulation during CPR
Desire to not have heparin
Bleeding
14. Additional Exclusion Criteria - Venovenous ECMO
Use of vasopressors is NOT a contraindication for VV ECMO
Isolated RV failure is NOT a contraindication for VV ECMO
15. Vasopresor - VV ECMO ASAIO Journal 2003;49:568-571
Neonatal ECMO-VA and VV
N = 43
Quantified inotropic support - Index
1 point = 1mcg/kgmin
Dopamine
Dobutamine
1 point = 0.01 mcg/kg/mon
Epinephrine
Norepinephrine
19. Infants with Inotropic Score > 10
20. ECMO Goals - VA and VV Maintain adequate tissue oxygenation to allow recovery from short term cardiopulmonary failure
Adjust ventilator settings allowing for Lung Rest minimizing further ventilator /oxygen induced lung injury. Not necessarily lower settings
21. ECMO Modes Venoarterial - VA
Blood drains-venous system
Blood returns-arterial system
Complete cardiopulmonary support
Venovenous - VV
Blood drains-venous system
Blood returns-venous system
Pulmonary support only
22. Advantages of VA ECMO Able to give full cardiopulmonary support
No mixing of arterial / venous blood
Good oxygenation at low ECMO flows
Allows for total lung rest
23. Disadvantages of VA ECMO Ligation of the right carotid artery
Nonpulsatile arterial blood flow
Suboptimal conditions for LV function
Low preload
High afterload
High wall stress
Low coronary oxygenation
24. Disadvantages of VA ECMO
Systemic emboli
Air
thrombus
25. Advantages of VV ECMO No ligation of carotid artery
Normal pulsatile blood flow
Optimize LV performance
More preload
Less afterload
Better coronary oxygenation
Less ventricular wall stress
No systemic emboli
26. Disadvantages of VV ECMO Need a functioning LV
Mixing of blood lower arterial saturation
Need increased ECMO flow
Need higher hemoglobin
Need to place a larger cannula
More difficulty monitoring adequacy of oxygen delivery
Recirculation of ECMO flow
27. Disadvantages of VV ECMO May need to convert to VA
Need to be fully heparinized
Cannula cannot be heparin bonded
28. VV ECMO -Double lumen Newborns
>90% of VV ECMO - Double lumen
12F and 15F OriGen
Pediatric
35% of VV ECMO -double lumen
18F - largest OriGen cannula
65% internal jugular, femoral, sapphenous
29. VV ECMO -Double lumen Cannula site
Internal jugular vein (15F double lumen- preferred)
Cannula tip low in the right atrium
34. Optimal Cannula Placement Adequate size
Correct depth
Low Right Atrium
Correct Rotation
Label visible
Drainage limb (Blue) posterior
Infusion limb (Red) anterior
Vertical orientation
Head - midline
No Kinks
36. Recirculation Oxygenated ECMO blood returning to the ECMO circuit immediately after infusion
37. Recirculation factors Head /cannula position
Changes with head rotation
Changes in lung volume / relative position of the heart and cannula
ECMO flow
Right atrial size / intravascular volume
RV contractility
40. ECMO Flow -Recirculation More ECMO flow will always increase recirculation
More ECMO flow may either
Increase blood flow to baby
Decrease blood flow to baby
41. VA ECMO ECMO flow rate is proportional to the level of support
More flow More support
Always advantageous if more flow is possible
More ECMO flow will always increase SvO2
42. Pulmonary Support - VV Net ECMO blood flow of infant = measure ECMO flow - recirculation flow
ECMO flow (flow probe) DOES NOT indicate level of support
SvO2 DOES NOT reflect level of systemic oxygen delivery
43. Circulatory Support Net flow to baby assessed by
Infant color
Infant arterial saturation and PaO2
44. Assessment of Recirculation More recirculation if
Decreasing baby arterial sat or PaO2
Increasing SvO2 on ECMO circuit
Decreasing color difference on drainage and infusion limbs of circuit
45. Reducing Recirculation Adjusting relative cannula position
Head position
Lung inflation
Decrease ECMO flow
Increase intravascular volume
Increase RV contractility
Volume
Vasopressors
Pulmonary vasodilators
46. VV - VA Conversion Needed if
10-15% of cases
Hemodynamic support is inadequate
Respiratory support is inadequate
More problematic when ultrafiltration is used
47. VV ECMO - Specific Issues ECMO Prime
Must have added heparin
Must have Ca added
Ionized Ca on circuit must be checked prior to cannulation
Potassium must be checked
48. Heparin If no heparin added
Addition of Ca binds citrate of blood products
Loss of anticoagulant activity
Acute clotting of the entire circuit
Need to prime another circuit
49. Calcium If no calcium added
Acute hypocalcemia - Ca binds to citrate of blood products
Loss of LV and RV contractility
Acute hypotension
Cardiac arrest
50. Potasium If potassium in prime is not checked
Possible higher serum K from the stored PRBC
Acute hyperkalemia
Arrythmia
Cardiac arrest
51. Head / Cannula Position Distal tip low in RA
Head in the midline with vertical orientation of the drainage and infusion limbs
RA drainage ports
Lateral
Infusion ports
Medial
52. Keys to Management
VV ECMO- DL
Need to think in terms of NET blood flow to the baby
Cannot quantify NET flow
SvO2 is not indicative of adequacy of systemic oxygen delivery
Indirectly assessed with SaO2 and PaO2 on the infant
53. To Improve oxygenation Give PRBC
Increase ECMO flow
Decrease recirculation
Check cannula position
Increase ntravascular volume
Increase RV contractility
54. Rest Ventilator Settings Pressures - similar to VA
FiO2 - able to wean to RA frequently
Better myocardial oxygenation via ECMO flow than VA
55. Jugular venous drainage 11% of all double lumen VV
Small study suggested decrease IVH
Reduced cerebral venous pressure
Advantage
Additional drainage facilities flow
2 site venous drainage lessens recirculation on VV ECMO
Improved oxygen delivery
Enables venous oxygen saturation monitoring on VV ECMO
56. Jugular Venous DrainageCephalad Cannula J Pediatr Surg 2004;39:672-676
Review of ELSO database
Neonatal Respiratory Failure VV ECMO 1989-2001
N = 2471
96% VV double lumem alone
3.7% with jugular venous drainage
Similar Outcomes
57. Operating Parameters SaO2 - 85-95%
PaO2 40-65 torr
Blood pressure - similar to VA
ECMO flows - 130-150+ ml/kg/min
HgB 12-15 g/dl
58. Weaning of ECMO - VV No clamp out needed
Increase ventilator
Decrease sweep gas flow rate and FiO2
Sweep gas flow can be completely stopped
SvO2 will reflect mixed venous saturation
No recirculation
61. VV ECMO Outcomes Generally slightly better than VA, but slightly different patient populations
Hemodynamically more stable
Less exposure to CPR
Better survival
Shorter duration of ECMO
Conversion VV to VA
12%
62. VA - VV Comparison studies J Peds Surg1993;28:530-536
Multicenter data
N=243
VA = 135
VV = 108
Similar survival
10% conversion to VA
Shorter runs
Less Neurologic complications