The Prolonged Use of VV ECMO Support in COVID-19: A Case Report
Kategoria artykułu: Case Report
Data publikacji: 07 lis 2020
Zakres stron: 224 - 230
Otrzymano: 02 sie 2020
Przyjęty: 29 wrz 2020
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/jccm-2020-0034
Słowa kluczowe
© 2020 Amelia Lucy Fitzgerald, Hemal Hitesh Vachharajani, Benjamin Paul Davidson, Natalie Joanne Kruit, Adam Trevor Eslick, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
COVID-19 has resulted in unprecedented global health and economic challenges. The reported mortality in patients with COVID-19 requiring mechanical ventilation is high. VV ECMO may serve as a lifesaving rescue therapy for a minority of patients with COVID-19; however, its impact on overall survival of these patients is unknown. To date, few reports describe successful discharge from ECMO in COVID-19 after a prolonged ECMO run. The only Australian case of a COVID-19 patient, supported by prolonged VV ECMO in conjunction with prone ventilation, complicated by significant airway bleeding, and successfully decannulated after forty-two days, is described. VV ECMO is a resource-intense form of respiratory support. Providing complex therapies such as VV ECMO during a pandemic has its unique challenges. This case report provides a unique insight into the potential clinical sequelae of COVID-19, supported in an intensive care environment which was not resource-limited at the time, and adds to the evolving experience of prolonged VV ECMO support for ARDS with a goal to lung recovery.