Title of article :
Successful use of VV-ECMO in a pregnant patient with severe ARDS
Author/Authors :
Carlier, Laurence Department of Anesthesiology - University Hospitals Leuven - Leuven, Belgium , Rex, Steffen Department of Anesthesiology - University Hospitals Leuven - Leuven, Belgium , Muller, Jan Department of Intensive Care - University Hospitals Leuven - Leuven, Belgium , Debaveye, Yves Department of Intensive Care - University Hospitals Leuven - Leuven, Belgium , Verelst, Sandra Department of Emergency Medicine - University Hospitals Leuven - Leuven, Belgium
Pages :
2
From page :
111
To page :
112
Abstract :
Around 0.1–0.2% of all pregnancies are complicated by respiratory failure. The altered physiology of pregnancy predisposes mother and child to develop hypoxia and respiratory failure more easily than a non-pregnant patient. Respiratory failure in pregnancy may have detrimental fetal complications, therefore extensive knowledge of the range of therapeutic options is necessary. If conventional lung-protective mechanical ventilation strategies fail, alternative approaches such as veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO) should be considered. Case presentation A previously healthy 30-year-old P1G2 at 26 weeks and 6 days of gestation was admitted to the emergency department because of a severe respiratory infection. She suffered of severe hypoxic respiratory failure due to an overwhelming pneumonia (influenza type A) with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Because long protective ventilation strategies and ventilation in prone positioning were inadequate, and further respiratory deterioration occurred, VV-ECMO was initiated. Conclusion In a pregnant patient with severe respiratory failure, when other interventions fail, initiation of VV-ECMO should not be delayed. The use of VV-ECMO in pregnancy is a multi-disciplinary team approach.
Keywords :
Prone ventilation , Veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation , Respiratory failure , Pregnancy
Journal title :
Turkish Journal of Emergency Medicine
Serial Year :
2019
Full Text URL :
Record number :
2580797
Link To Document :
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