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EDECMO Podcast

EDECMO 22 – Managing the Crashing Tox Patient with ECMO – with Leon Gussow & Steve Aks from The Poison Review

15 Jun 2015

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  …the key thing is to put them on ECMO when they need it, but not a minute sooner! -Leon Gussow In this episode Scott, Zack and Joe were all in the same room…in a conference room at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill – where we were doing ECPR studies in an animal model of cardiac arrest with Jim Manning. We spoke with legendary toxicologists Leon Gussow and Steve Aks about the role of ECMO and ECPR in the overdosed tox patient. This is a fascinating discussion about the nuances of ECMO in the crashing intoxicated patient. Check out THE POISON REVIEW and Subscribe to them in iTunes Leon Gussow MD, University of Illinois Medical Center, Chicago John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County Emergency Medicine News “Toxicology Rounds” Medical Editor of ‘The Poison Review” Steve Aks DO, FACMT, FACOEP, FACEP Director, Toxicology Fellowship Program, Department of Emergency Medicine, Cook County Health and Hospitals System   Some Unique Situations: ECMO and intralipid? What are the adverse effects associated with the combined use of intravenous lipid emulsion and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in the poisoned patient. Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2015 Mar;53(3):145-50. doi: 10.3109/15563650.2015.1004582. Epub 2015 Jan 29. Bolus dose intralipid before ECMO is reasonable and should not result in significant pump complications with our current oxygenators.  However, starting intra-lipid after the patient is on bypass won’t likely provide much more benefit and could shorten the life of your oxygenator. ECMO and Dialysis? Hemodialysis can be done in-line with the ECMO circuit, but its preferred to use a separate dialysis catheter placed at a remote site (ie the IJ).  A dialysis circuit CAN be spliced into the ECMO circuit, but is a little more complicated. You can know more about hemodialysis services here. Mitochondrial and Cellular Respiration Poisons (dinitrophenol & Cyanid) and Carbon Monoxide? ECMO is of NO USE in these intoxications.

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