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A simple technique to prevent limb ischemia during veno-arterial ECMO using the femoral artery: the posterior tibial approach
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Citations
11
References
2011
Year
Endovascular TechniqueLower Limb TraumaVascular TraumaSurgeryLower ExtremityPosterior Tibial ApproachOrthopaedic SurgeryLimb IschemiaVascular SurgeryAngiologyEndovascular ManagementFemoral ArteryVenous DiseaseVa EcmoLower Extremity IschemiaWound HealingVascular AccessMedicineAnesthesiology
Lower extremity ischemia is common when the femoral artery is used for veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA ECMO). We describe a new technique to reperfuse the extremity. The ipsilateral posterior tibial artery is exposed via a small incision behind the medial malleolus. The vessel is cannulated in a retrograde fashion and connected to the arterial limb of the ECMO circuit. Thirty-six patients received a posterior tibial reperfusion cannula: average flow was 155.8 ml/min and increased over the initial 24 hours. Fifty-eight percent received the posterior tibial cannula within 6 hours of ECMO initiation and none sustained permanent lower extremity injury. Of the remaining 42%, three required amputation or developed permanent neurologic injury. Overall survival was 41%. Cannulation of the posterior tibial artery is a simple technique to reperfuse the lower extremity during VA ECMO. The cannula should be inserted within 6 hours of ECMO initiation to avoid irreversible ischemic damage.
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