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Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for refractory acute respiratory distress syndrome in severe malaria

Authors :
Nina Patel
Darryl Abrams
May Lin Wilgus
Paulo Figueiredo
António Sarmento
Matthew Bacchetta
Roberto Roncon-Albuquerque
Lurdes Santos
Daniel Brodie
Jen Ting Chen
Carlos Alves
José Artur Paiva
Source :
Malaria Journal
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.

Abstract

BackgroundSevere malaria may be complicated by the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), which is associated with a high mortality. In the present report, a series of three cases of imported malaria complicated by refractory severe ARDS supported with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is presented.MethodsOne female and two male adult patients (ages 39 to 53) were included. Two patients hadPlasmodium falciparuminfection and one patient hadPlasmodium vivaxandPlasmodium ovaleco-infection. Anti-malarial therapy consisted in intravenous quinine (in two patients) and intravenous quinidine (in one patient), plus clindamycin or doxycycline.ResultsDespite lung protective ventilation, a conservative strategy of fluid management, corticosteroids (two patients), prone position (two patients) and inhaled nitric oxide (one patient), refractory severe ARDS supervened (PaO2to FiO2ratio 68) and venovenous ECMO was then initiated. In one patient, a bicaval dual-lumen cannula was inserted; in the two other patients, a two-site configuration was used. Two patients survived to hospital-discharge (duration of ECMO support: 8.5 days) and one patient died from nosocomial sepsis and multi-organ failure after 40 days of ECMO support.ConclusionsECMO support allowed adequate oxygenation and correction of hypercapnia under lung protective ventilation, therefore reducing ventilator-induced lung injury. ECMO referral should be considered early in malaria complicated by severe ARDS refractory to conventional treatment.

Details

ISSN :
14752875
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Malaria Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....db7601a92300921aa78b2241fc2668c2