AI Article Synopsis

  • VA-ECMO (veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation) is used to treat severe cardiac failure and can restore overall blood circulation, but its impact on small blood vessel function is still unclear.
  • A systematic review of the literature (1215 studies sourced, 11 included) focused on how VA-ECMO affects microcirculation, measuring factors like small vessel density and blood flow.
  • Initial findings suggest that microcirculatory function improves within hours for survivors of cardiac events post-ECMO, but this improvement levels off; more extensive research is needed to confirm these effects over time.

Article Abstract

Veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) is used in case of potentially reversible cardiac failure and restores systemic hemodynamics. However, whether this is followed by improvement of microcirculatory perfusion is unknown. Moreover, critically ill patients have possible pre-existing microcirculatory perfusion disturbances. Therefore, this review provides an overview of alterations in sublingual microcirculatory perfusion in critically ill adult patients receiving VA-ECMO support. Pubmed, Embase (Ovid), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Web of Science were systematically searched according to PRISMA guidelines. Studies reporting sublingual microcirculatory perfusion measurements in adult patients supported by VA-ECMO were included. Outcome parameters included small vessel density (SVD), perfused vessel density (PVD), perfused small vessel density (PSVD), proportion of perfused vessels (PPV), microvascular flow index (MFI) and the heterogeneity index (HI). The protocol was registered at PROSPERO (CRD42021243930). The search identified 1215 studies of which 11 were included. Cardiogenic shock was the most common indication for VA-ECMO (n=8). Three studies report increased PSVD, PPV, and MFI 24 hours after initiation of ECMO compared to pre-ECMO. Nonetheless, microcirculatory perfusion stabilized thereafter. Four out of four studies showed higher PSVD and PPV in survivors compared to non-survivors. Over time, survivors showed recovery of microcirculatory perfusion within hours of initiation of ECMO, whereas this was absent in non-survivors. Notwithstanding the limited sample, VA-ECMO seems to improve microcirculatory perfusion shortly after initiation of ECMO, especially in survivors. Further research in larger cohorts is needed to clarify the longitudinal effects of ECMO on microcirculatory perfusion.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/micc.12891DOI Listing

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