4.6 Article

Respiratory dialysis: Reduction in dependence on mechanical ventilation by venovenous extracorporeal CO2 removal

Journal

CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Volume 39, Issue 6, Pages 1382-1387

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e31820eda45

Keywords

lung-protective ventilation; mechanical ventilation; extracorporeal circulation; CO2 removal; respiratory dialysis; swine

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Objectives: Mechanical ventilation is injurious to the lung. Use of lung-protective strategies may complicate patient management, motivating a search for better lung-replacement approaches. We investigated the ability of a novel extracorporeal venovenous CO2 removal device to reduce minute ventilation while maintaining normocarbia. Design: Prospective animal study. Setting: Government laboratory animal intensive care unit. Subjects: Seven sedated swine. Interventions: Tracheostomy, volume-controlled mechanical ventilation, and 72 hrs of round-the-clock intensive care unit care. A 15-F dual-lumen catheter was inserted in the external jugular vein and connected to the Hemolung, an extracorporeal pump-driven venovenous CO2 removal device. Minute ventilation was reduced, and normocarbia (Paco(2) 35-45 mm Hg) maintained. Heparinization was maintained at an activated clotting time of 150-180 secs. Measurements and Main Results: Minute ventilation (L/min), CO2 removal by Hemolung (mL/min), Hemolung blood flow, O-2 consumption (mL/min), CO2 production by the lung (mL/min), Paco(2), and plasma-free hemoglobin (g/dL) were measured at baseline (where applicable), 2 hrs after device insertion, and every 6 hrs thereafter. Minute ventilation was reduced from 5.6 L/min at baseline to 2.6 L/min 2 hrs after device insertion and was maintained at 3 L/min until the end of the study. CO2 removal by Hemolung remained steady over 72 hrs, averaging 72 +/- 1.2 mL/min at blood flows of 447 +/- 5 mL/min. After insertion, O-2 consumption did not change; CO2 production by the lung decreased by 50% and stayed at that level (p < .001). As the arterial PCO2 rose or fell, so did CO2 removal by Hemolung. Plasma-free hemoglobin did not change. Conclusions: Venovenous CO2 removal enabled a 50% reduction in minute ventilation while maintaining normocarbia and may be an effective lung-protective adjunct to mechanical ventilation. (Crit Care Med 2011; 39:1382-1387)

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