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Journal Article
Review
Extra-corporal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) in Massive Pulmonary Embolism.
Annals of Vascular Surgery 2024 April 7
BACKGROUND: Massive pulmonary embolism (MPE) carries significant 30-day mortality, and a change in societal guidelines has promoted the increasing use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in the immediate management of MPE-associated cardiovascular shock. This narrative review examines the current status of ECMO in MPE.
METHODS: A literature review was performed from 1982 to 2022 search for the terms Pulmonary embolism and ECMO and refined by examining those publications that covered MPE RESULTS: In the patient with MPE, veno-arterial-ECMO is now recommended as a bridge to interventional therapy. It can reliably decrease right ventricular overload, improve RV function, and allow hemodynamic stability and restoration of tissue oxygenation. The use of ECMO in MPE has been associated with lower mortality in registry reviews, but there has been no significant difference in outcomes between patients treated with and without ECMO in meta-analyses. Applying ECMO is also associated with substantial multisystem morbidity due to systemic inflammatory response, bleeding with coagulopathy, hemorrhagic stroke, renal dysfunction, and acute limb ischemia, which must be factored into the outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: The application of ECMO in MPE should be combined with an aggressive interventional pulmonary interventional program and should strictly adhere to the current selection criteria.
METHODS: A literature review was performed from 1982 to 2022 search for the terms Pulmonary embolism and ECMO and refined by examining those publications that covered MPE RESULTS: In the patient with MPE, veno-arterial-ECMO is now recommended as a bridge to interventional therapy. It can reliably decrease right ventricular overload, improve RV function, and allow hemodynamic stability and restoration of tissue oxygenation. The use of ECMO in MPE has been associated with lower mortality in registry reviews, but there has been no significant difference in outcomes between patients treated with and without ECMO in meta-analyses. Applying ECMO is also associated with substantial multisystem morbidity due to systemic inflammatory response, bleeding with coagulopathy, hemorrhagic stroke, renal dysfunction, and acute limb ischemia, which must be factored into the outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: The application of ECMO in MPE should be combined with an aggressive interventional pulmonary interventional program and should strictly adhere to the current selection criteria.
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