1. Brain monitoring in adult and pediatric ECMO patients: the importance of early and late assessments
- Author
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Fabio S. Tacco Ne, Paolo Zanatta, Thijs Delnoij, Dirk W. Donker, Dirk Vlasselaers, Mark Davidson, Thomas Mueller, Jan Belohlavek, Matteo Di Nardo, Carl Davis, Nashwa Matta, Hanneke IJsselstijn, Piero David, Dinis dos Reis Miranda, Ralf Michael Muellenbach, Mirko Belliato, Roberto Lorusso, Aparna Hoskote, Mirjana Cvetkovic, and Pediatric Surgery
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Complications ,NEAR-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY ,Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring ,INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGE ,medicine.medical_treatment ,LIFE-SUPPORT ,NEONATAL ECMO ,Perfusion scanning ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,EXTRACORPOREAL MEMBRANE-OXYGENATION ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,CARDIAC-ARREST ,medicine ,Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ,Humans ,ELSO REGISTRY DATA ,SENSORINEURAL HEARING-LOSS ,Intensive care medicine ,Adverse effect ,Neurophysiological Monitoring ,business.industry ,AMPLITUDE-INTEGRATED ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,Neuropsychology ,Brain ,Neurophysiological monitoring ,Amplitude integrated electroencephalography ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,030228 respiratory system ,Life support ,CRITICALLY-ILL ADULTS ,business ,Neurocognitive - Abstract
Monitoring brain integrity and neurocognitive function is a new and important target for the management of a patient treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), in particular because of the increasing awareness of cerebral abnormalities that may potentially occur in this setting. Continuous regular monitoring, as well as repeated assessment for cerebral complications has become an essential element of the ECMO patient management. Besides well-known complications, like bleeding, ischemic stroke, seizures, and brain hypoperfusion, other less defined yet relevant injury and clinical manifestations are increasingly reported and impacting on ECMO patient prognosis at short term. Furthermore, it is becoming more evident that neurologic complication may not occur only in the early phase. Indeed, other potential adverse events related to the long-Term neurocognitive function have been also recently documented either in children or adult ECMO patients. Despite increasing awareness of these aspects, generally accepted protocols and clinical management strategies in this respect are still lacking. Current means to monitor brain perfusion or detecting ongoing cerebral tissue injury are rather limited, and most techniques provide indirect or post-insult recognition of irreversible tissue injury. Continuous monitoring of brain perfusion, serial assessment of brain-derived serum biomarkers, timely neuro-imaging, profesand post-discharge counselling for neurocognitive dysfunction, particularly in pediatric patients, are novel pathways focusing on neurologic assessment with important implications in daily practice to assess brain function and integrity not only during the ECMO-related hospitalization, but also at long-Term to re-evaluate the neuropsychological integrity, although well designed studies will be necessary to elucidate the cost-effectiveness of these management strategies.
- Published
- 2017