Venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO) is a salvage treatment for severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). With the large-scale implementation of VV-ECMO in critical care medicine departments in China, significant progress has been made in treating severe ARDS. However, the patient mortality rate remains high. The pathophysiological essence of ARDS is an imbalance between the body's oxygen supply and demand, causing tissue and cell hypoxia, organ dysfunction, and even death. The VV-ECMO treatment process still requires mechanical ventilation assistance. However, inappropriate mechanical ventilation settings can lead to ventilator-related lung injury (VILI). In recent years, mechanical power has gradually attracted everyone's attention and is considered the cause of VILI. The transpulmonary mechanical power is more accurate to the energy directly performed to the lung tissue. Transpulmonary mechanical energy has a specific value in judging the prognosis of mechanically ventilated patients, but its clinical significance in treating patients with VV-ECMO is unclear. This study aimed to explore the value of transpulmonary mechanical power in predicting the prognosis of patients with severe ARDS patients treated with VV-ECMO.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Use transpulmonary pressure to guide ventilator setting in ECMO for severe ARDS patients.
Beijing Chao-Yang Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
RECRUITINGPatients successfully weaned from VV-ECMO
Weaning VV-ECMO more than 48 hours with stable oxygenation and no need to re-establish ECMO
Time frame: After patients enrolled 60 days
60-day mortality
Mortality rate at 60 days of VV-ECMO support
Time frame: After patients enrolled 60 days
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