2014
DOI: 10.1097/ta.0000000000000343
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Automated inhaled nitric oxide alerts for adult extracorporeal membrane oxygenation patient identification

Abstract: Diagnostic test, level V.

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In the past NO has been reported as an indicator for considering the need of ECMO therapy in polytrauma patients. 27 , 31 In our case series, eight out of 19 patients were also treated with NO, but there was no difference in outcome. Due to the dilative effect of NO on the pulmonary vasculature and its related improvement of the blood flow it could improve oxygenation in uninjured lung areas.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 57%
“…In the past NO has been reported as an indicator for considering the need of ECMO therapy in polytrauma patients. 27 , 31 In our case series, eight out of 19 patients were also treated with NO, but there was no difference in outcome. Due to the dilative effect of NO on the pulmonary vasculature and its related improvement of the blood flow it could improve oxygenation in uninjured lung areas.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 57%
“…Largely due to bleeding concerns associated with systemic anticoagulation, the use of ECLS in trauma has traditionally been uncommon despite 12% to 25% of injured patients developing ARDS, potentially as a result of pulmonary contusions or transfusion-related acute lung injury 15 . More recently, thoracic trauma has been recognized as a potential indication for V-V ECLS, with triggers such as hypoxemia (Pa o 2 /FIO 2 < 80 mmHg), hypercapnic failure (pH <7.25), and inhaled nitric oxide being used to support decision-making 16,17 . Technological changes, such as heparin-bonded circuits and cannulas, centrifugal pumps, and polymethyl-pentene oxygenators, have facilitated ECLS protocols that are less dependent on systemic anticoagulation, mitigating some of the concerns associated with the application of ECLS in trauma.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…15 More recently, thoracic trauma has been recognized as a potential indication for V-V ECLS, with triggers such as hypoxemia (PaO 2 /FIO 2 < 80 mmHg), hypercapnic failure (pH <7.25), and inhaled nitric oxide being used to support decision-making. 16,17 Technological changes, such as heparin-bonded circuits and cannulas, centrifugal pumps, and polymethyl-pentene oxygenators, have facilitated ECLS protocols that are less dependent on systemic anticoagulation, mitigating some of the concerns associated with the application of ECLS in trauma. Indeed, several case series have been published whereby ECLS has been successfully run without systemic anticoagulation, sometimes for several days.…”
Section: Indication 1: Gas Exchange For Lung Injurymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…e-alert. We postulate that this may be related to the complexity of interpreting chest radiograph reports with natural language processing, difficulty deriving ventilator settings from EHRs, or difficulty in accurately determining the beginning of acute lung injury or worsening of ARDS (e.g., initiation of inhaled nitric oxide as a marker for severe ARDS), which has been shown in other studies (28)(29)(30). However, Blum and colleagues developed automated alerting for the early identification of acute lung injury, and this resulted in significant reduction in the tidal volume administered compared with control subjects (31).…”
Section: Brief Communicationmentioning
confidence: 98%