OBJECTIVES: This clinical trial aimed to compare the ultrasound-guided in-plane infraclavicular cannulation of the axillary vein (AXV) and the ultrasound-guided out-of-plane cannulation of the internal jugular vein (IJV). DESIGN: A prospective, single-blinded, open label, parallel-group, randomized trial. SETTING: Two university-affiliated ICUs in Poland (Opole and Lublin). PATIENTS: Mechanically ventilated intensive care patients with clinical indications for central venous line placement. INTERVENTIONS: Patients were randomly assigned into two groups: the IJV group (n = 304) and AXV group (n = 306). The primary outcome was to compare the IJV group and AXV group through the venipuncture and catheterization success rates. Secondary outcomes were catheter tip malposition and early mechanical complication rates. All catheterizations were performed by advanced residents and consultants in anesthesiology and intensive care. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The IJV puncture rate was 100%, and the AXV was 99.7% (chi-square, p = 0.19). The catheterization success rate in the IJV group was 98.7% and 96.7% in the AXV group (chi-square, p = 0.11). The catheter tip malposition rate was 9.9% in the IJV group and 10.1% in the AXV group (chi-square, p = 0.67). The early mechanical complication rate in the IJV group was 3% (common carotid artery puncture—4 cases, perivascular hematoma—2 cases, vertebral artery puncture—1 case, pneumothorax—1 case) and 2.6% in the AXV group (axillary artery puncture—4 cases, perivascular hematoma—4 cases) (chi-square, p = 0.79). CONCLUSIONS: No difference was found between the real-time ultrasound-guided out-of-plane cannulation of the IJV and the infraclavicular real-time ultrasound-guided in-plane cannulation of the AXV. Both techniques are equally efficient and safe in mechanically ventilated critically ill patients.
Background: A high-volume center with a multidisciplinary team is regarded as the optimal place for providing extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). We hypothesize that an ECMO center can also be successfully created and subsequently developed entirely by intensivists in a mid-size mixed intensive care unit (ICU). Methods: A model was created for setting up a new ECMO referral center within the structure of an existing mixed ICU in a tertiary hospital. A retrospective analysis was carried out of the first 33 patients treated in the initial period of the center’s activity, from mid 2018 to the end of 2020. Results: An ECMO center was established and developed entirely based on the resources of an existing mixed ICU. Thirty-three patients were treated. They had an overall survival rate at 90 days of 60.6%. In veno-venous (VV) mode ECMO duration, ICU length of stay, and SOFA score were significantly higher than in veno-arterial mode. No significant differences in clinical characteristics were observed between survivors and non-survivors on VV-ECMO. Conclusions: A regional ECMO center can be set up as an integral part of a mixed ICU in a tertiary hospital. Extracorporeal therapy, such as continuous renal replacement therapy and mechanical ventilation can be managed entirely by intensivists. Further studies are needed to show that the ICU-based approach to setting up a new ECMO center is no less effective than the multidisciplinary approach.
We would like to present a case of a young male patient with fulminant myocarditis and multi-organ failure treated in our intensive care unit. In the early phase of the treatment, we simultaneously applied mechanical circulatory support (MCS) devices, including veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). The use of short-term MCS devices in fulminant myocarditis and in other forms of severe heart failure has increased in recent years [1]. The results of some clinical trials indicate that this mode of treatment, when applied in the early phase of cardiogenic shock, yields promising final results [2,3].A 27-year old, previously healthy man was admitted to the Emergency Department with dyspnea, chest pain, and arterial hypotension. He had been suffering from flu-like syndrome for a week prior to admission. Upon hospital arrival, his mean arterial pressure was 50 mm Hg, and the heart rate was 120 beats per minute. Transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) revealed severe dysfunction of both ventricles with 15% left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF), 8 cm s -1 velocity-time integral of the left ventricle outflow track (LVOT VTI), and 12 mm tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE). Laboratory tests showed troponin above
Vitamin D is recognised as having two main func tions in humans. In the classic function, vitamin D is responsible for extracellular calcium metabolism, namely intestinal absorption and musculoskele tal milieu homeostasis [1-3]. In the pleiotropic (nonskeletal) function, it resembles a hormonal mechanism of action. Vitamin D binds to genomic sequences, known as vitamin D response elements, that are scattered in the body, and subsequently regulates gene expression. Specific vitamin D re ceptors are omnipresent in most human tissues. Vitamin D response elements are capable of subse quently modifying cellular processes such as prolife ration, differentiation, apoptosis, angiogenesis, hor
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