Extracorporeal life support in cardiotoxicant poisoning-A narrative review.

Basic Clin Pharmacol Toxicol

Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital, Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • ECLS (Extracorporeal Life Support) can enhance circulation in severe cases of cardiac dysfunction or arrest, particularly in patients poisoned by cardiotoxic substances.
  • The review focused on specific drugs, especially antiarrhythmics and aluminium phosphide, analyzing literature from the past 30 years and finding mostly single case reports with limited controlled studies.
  • While ECLS showed better survival rates in refractory cardiovascular failure (about 80%) compared to cardiac arrest (25%-66%), clearer selection criteria for its use in poisoned patients are needed due to the low-to-moderate evidence quality.

Article Abstract

Extracorporeal life support (ECLS) improves circulation in life-threatening cardiac dysfunction or arrest patients. Its benefits in drug-induced cardiovascular complications are debated. Indications and outcomes are poorly established. We performed a narrative review discussing ECLS indications, timing and results in cardiotoxicant-poisoned patients. The review was focused on antiarrhythmic drugs and aluminium phosphide. Literature analysis was limited to the past 30 years in adults. Most reports were single cases and retrospective except one prospective case series of limited size, two of them controlled. ECLS indications and timing were at the discretion of physicians in charge but mostly included persistent cardiovascular failure despite elevated doses of inotropic/vasopressor support associated with elevated blood lactate concentrations (usually, >5 mmol/L) and collapsed left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF; usually, ≤40%). Survival improved using ECLS versus standard care in one study. Survival was ~80% if ECLS was implemented in refractory cardiovascular failure and 25%-66% if implemented in cardiac arrest. In two controlled studies, survival of ECLS-treated aluminium phosphide-poisoned patients was improved versus standard care, if implemented in the presence of systolic blood pressure ≤80 mmHg despite inotropic/vasopressor treatment, arterial pH ≤ 7.0 and LVEF ≤ 40%. Despite low-to-moderate level of evidence, ECLS seems effective to improve survival in selected cardiotoxicant-poisoned patients. Selection criteria need clarification.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bcpt.13804DOI Listing

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