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. 2012 Oct;67(10):1157–1163. doi: 10.6061/clinics/2012(10)07

Table 5.

Complications during ECMO support *).

Respiratory
    Pneumothorax – n (%) # 3 (30)
    Persistent hypoxemia – n (%) §) 3 (30)
Gastrointestinal
    Hypoxic hepatitis – n (%) 5 (50)
    Digestive hemorrhage – n (%) 2 (20)
Hematological
    Hemolysis ®) 3 (30)
    Thrombocytopenia (<150000) – n (%) 9 (90)
    Thrombocytopenia (<100000) – n (%) 8 (80)
    Thrombocytopenia (<50000) – n (%) 7 (70)
ECMO system
    Minor canulae bleeding – n (%)©) 2 (20)
    Flowmeter loss of signal – n (%) 2 (20)
    Blood leakage – n (%) 0 (0)
    Re-circulation – n (%) ¥ 1 (10)
    Centrifugal pump cavitation – n (%) £ 1 (10)
    Shaking circuit – n (%) £ 1 (10)
    Sudden reduction in blood flow – n (%) £ 3 (20)
Central nervous system
    Seizure – n (%) 2 (20)
    Brain death – n (%) 1 (10)
*

ECMO denotes extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.

# The pneumothoraxes occurred at the end of ECMO support in all patients.

§

Persistent hypoxemia was defined as a PaO2≤50 mmHg despite an ECMO blood flow >5500 L/minute, a PEEP≥10 cmH2O and a FiO2≥0.6.

¶ Hypoxic hepatitis was diagnosed when alanine transaminase and aspartate aminotransferase were acutely elevated by at least five-fold soon after the initiation of ECMO support.

®

Hemolysis was considered in patients who had brown urine, brown effluent fluid from renal replacement therapy and/or a haptoglobin level<36 mg/dL (low limit of normality in our laboratory).

©

Sufficient bleeding to require a cannula insertion dressing change more than twice a day.

¥ Re-circulation was considered when persistent hypoxemia occurred with ECMO system drainage and an oxygen blood saturation of<70%.

£ Centrifugal pump cavitation, a shaking circuit and a sudden decrease in blood flow constitute the “suck-up” phenomena, which are secondary to the pre-pump lower pressure associated with drainage cannula misplacement or hypovolemia.