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1.
J Crit Care ; 82: 154759, 2024 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38461659

OBJECTIVES: Although respiratory failure is the most common feature in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), abdominal organ involvement is likewise frequently observed. To investigate visceral and thoracic circulation and abdominal organ damage in COVID-19 patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A monocentric observational study was carried on. In COVID-19 patients affected by acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) (n = 31) or mild pneumonia (n = 60) thoracoabdominal circulation was evaluated using Doppler-ultrasound and computed tomography. The study also included non-COVID-19 patients affected by ARDS (n = 10) or portal hypertension (n = 10) for comparison of the main circulatory changes. RESULTS: Patients affected by COVID-19 ARDS showed hyperdynamic visceral flow and increased portal velocity, hepatic artery resistance-index, and spleen diameter relative to those with mild-pneumonia (p = 0.001). Splanchnic circulatory parameters significantly correlated with the main respiratory indexes (p < 0.001) and pulmonary artery diameter (p = 0.02). The chest and abdominal vascular remodeling pattern of COVID-19 ARDS patients resembled the picture observed in the PH group, while differed from that of the non-COVID ARDS group. A more severe COVID-19 presentation was associated with worse liver dysfunction and enhanced inflammatory activation; these parameters both correlated with abdominal (p = 0.04) and chest imaging measures (p = 0.03). CONCLUSION: In COVID-19 ARDS patients there are abdominal and lung vascular modifications that depict a portal hypertension-like pattern. The correlation between visceral vascular remodeling, pulmonary artery enlargement, and organ damage in these critically ill patients is consistent with a portal hyperlfow-like syndrome that could contribute to the peculiar characteristics of respiratory failure in these patients. CLINICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT: our data suggest that the severity of COVID-19 lung involvement is directly related to the development of a portal hyperflow-like syndrome. These observations should help in defining the need for a closer monitoring, but also to develop dedicated therapeutic strategies.


COVID-19 , Hypertension, Portal , Respiratory Distress Syndrome , Humans , COVID-19/complications , COVID-19/physiopathology , Male , Female , Respiratory Distress Syndrome/physiopathology , Respiratory Distress Syndrome/diagnostic imaging , Middle Aged , Hypertension, Portal/physiopathology , Aged , SARS-CoV-2 , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Ultrasonography, Doppler
4.
ASAIO J ; 68(2): 184-189, 2022 02 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33788801

Veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (vv-ECMO) represents one of the most advanced respiratory support for patients suffering from severe acute respiratory distress syndrome. During vv-ECMO a certain amount of extracorporeal oxygenated blood can flow back from the reinfusion into the drainage cannula without delivering oxygen to the patient. Detection and quantification of this dynamic phenomenon, defined recirculation, are critical to optimize the ECMO efficiency. Our study aimed to measure the recirculation fraction (RF) using a thermodilution technique. We built an in vitro circuit to simulate patients undergoing vv-ECMO (ECMO flow: 1.5, 3, and 4.5 L/min) with different cardiac output, using a recirculation bridge to achieve several known RFs (from 0% to 50%). The RF, computed as the ratio of the area under temperature-time curves (AUC) of the drainage and reinfusion, was significantly related to the set RF (AUC ratio (%) = 0.979 × RF (%) + 0.277%, p < 0.0001), but it was not dependent on tested ECMO and cardiac output values. A Bland-Altman analysis showed an AUC ratio bias (precision) of -0.21% for the overall data. Test-retest reliability showed an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.993. This study proved the technical feasibility and computation validity of the applied thermodilution technique in computing vv-ECMO RF.


Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation , Respiratory Distress Syndrome , Cannula , Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation/adverse effects , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Respiratory Distress Syndrome/therapy , Thermodilution
5.
Membranes (Basel) ; 11(7)2021 Jun 22.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34206672

Extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (ECCO2R) is a promising strategy to manage acute respiratory failure. We hypothesized that ECCO2R could be enhanced by ventilating the membrane lung with a sodium hydroxide (NaOH) solution with high CO2 absorbing capacity. A computed mathematical model was implemented to assess NaOH-CO2 interactions. Subsequently, we compared NaOH infusion, named "alkaline liquid ventilation", to conventional oxygen sweeping flows. We built an extracorporeal circuit with two polypropylene membrane lungs, one to remove CO2 and the other to maintain a constant PCO2 (60 ± 2 mmHg). The circuit was primed with swine blood. Blood flow was 500 mL × min-1. After testing the safety and feasibility of increasing concentrations of aqueous NaOH (up to 100 mmol × L-1), the CO2 removal capacity of sweeping oxygen was compared to that of 100 mmol × L-1 NaOH. We performed six experiments to randomly test four sweep flows (100, 250, 500, 1000 mL × min-1) for each fluid plus 10 L × min-1 oxygen. Alkaline liquid ventilation proved to be feasible and safe. No damages or hemolysis were detected. NaOH showed higher CO2 removal capacity compared to oxygen for flows up to 1 L × min-1. However, the highest CO2 extraction power exerted by NaOH was comparable to that of 10 L × min-1 oxygen. Further studies with dedicated devices are required to exploit potential clinical applications of alkaline liquid ventilation.

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