In Resuscitation this month there were a couple articles about the use of ECMO out of hospital. In the last couple of years in hospital ECMO has been used for patients in refractory cardiac arrest. The results have been very promising, however not every hospital has teams capable of placing a patient on ECMO available.
Some European EMS systems are trialling deployable ECMO teams or using them on MICU ambulances staffed by physicians. The Resuscitation articles report two separate successful resuscitations (witnessed drowning and witnessed arrest) from asystole to sinus rhythm with field insertion of VA ECMO. Unfortunately, both had poor neurologic outcomes and did not survive to be discharged.
Although I don't ever see paramedics doing this, ECLS might become more common practice out of hospital.
Out-of-hospital extracorporeal life support for cardiac arrest-A case report.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21536364
"We report the use of out-of-hospital extracorporeal life support (ECLS) in cardiac arrest. We treated a 9-year-old girl with cardiac arrest after warm-water drowning with percutaneous venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) using a new portable Mini-ECMO system. A beating-heart circulation was reestablished on ECMO, but, unfortunately, our patient did not survive. This case shows that Mini-ECMO support can be used to restore an effective circulation and gas exchange in the out-of-hospital setting."
Out-of-hospital extra-corporeal life support implantation during refractory cardiac arrest in a half-marathon runner.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21536365
"For patients who present with an out-of-hospital refractory cardiac arrest, in-hospital extracorporeal life-support (ECLS) initiation represents an alternative therapy which allows significant survival. We describe here the first case of out-of-hospital ECLS implantation in a patient presenting with a refractory cardiac arrest during a road race. ECLS was initiated within the MICU ambulance 60min after cardiac arrest and enabled restoration of cardiac output to 4.5lmin(-1). Coronarography revealed a severe isolated stenosis of the right coronary artery, which was treated by angioplasty. The cardiogenic shock resolved progressively, enabling ECLS weaning within 48h, while renal, hepatic, and respiratory functions recovered simultaneously."
Some European EMS systems are trialling deployable ECMO teams or using them on MICU ambulances staffed by physicians. The Resuscitation articles report two separate successful resuscitations (witnessed drowning and witnessed arrest) from asystole to sinus rhythm with field insertion of VA ECMO. Unfortunately, both had poor neurologic outcomes and did not survive to be discharged.
Although I don't ever see paramedics doing this, ECLS might become more common practice out of hospital.
Out-of-hospital extracorporeal life support for cardiac arrest-A case report.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21536364
"We report the use of out-of-hospital extracorporeal life support (ECLS) in cardiac arrest. We treated a 9-year-old girl with cardiac arrest after warm-water drowning with percutaneous venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) using a new portable Mini-ECMO system. A beating-heart circulation was reestablished on ECMO, but, unfortunately, our patient did not survive. This case shows that Mini-ECMO support can be used to restore an effective circulation and gas exchange in the out-of-hospital setting."
Out-of-hospital extra-corporeal life support implantation during refractory cardiac arrest in a half-marathon runner.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21536365
"For patients who present with an out-of-hospital refractory cardiac arrest, in-hospital extracorporeal life-support (ECLS) initiation represents an alternative therapy which allows significant survival. We describe here the first case of out-of-hospital ECLS implantation in a patient presenting with a refractory cardiac arrest during a road race. ECLS was initiated within the MICU ambulance 60min after cardiac arrest and enabled restoration of cardiac output to 4.5lmin(-1). Coronarography revealed a severe isolated stenosis of the right coronary artery, which was treated by angioplasty. The cardiogenic shock resolved progressively, enabling ECLS weaning within 48h, while renal, hepatic, and respiratory functions recovered simultaneously."