1 / 15

Accuracy of CVVH on ECMO : A comparison of IV pump versus Braun Diapact driven systems

Accuracy of CVVH on ECMO : A comparison of IV pump versus Braun Diapact driven systems. Matthew L. Paden, MD Division of Pediatric Critical Care Emory University Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston. The Clinical Problem.

ashanti
Download Presentation

Accuracy of CVVH on ECMO : A comparison of IV pump versus Braun Diapact driven systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Accuracy of CVVH on ECMO : A comparison of IV pump versus Braun Diapact driven systems Matthew L. Paden, MD Division of Pediatric Critical Care Emory University Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston

  2. The Clinical Problem • Multiple ECMO/CVVH patients who are 10+ liters positive on paper, yet are clinically dehydrated • Hypothesis : Both IV pump and Braun Diapact driven CVVH systems when used with ECMO have error rates greater than 5% / hour.

  3. Methods for CRRT on ECMO • Commercially available CRRT machines • B Braun Diapact • Edwards Aquarius • Fresenius • Gambro Prisma/Prismaflex • Advantage – Standardized equipment, “built for the purpose”

  4. Methods for CRRT on ECMO • IV Pump Driven • Described by Weber, et al 1998 • IV pumps used to create ultrafiltrate and deliver replacement fluid • Ultrafiltrate is measured using a urometer • Advantage – low cost, no additional training for ECMO specialists, less extracorporeal blood volume

  5. The Problem • Inaccuracy has been described in CRRT in patients not on ECMO • The pumps are the problem • PCRRT 2000 – • 7% extra ultrafiltrate removed • 2% less replacement fluid delivered • ASAIO 1992 – • Up to 12.5% error rate • Error correlates with pressure drop across membrane and pump type

  6. Alaris Pump Accuracy Sucosky et al. Awaiting publication. 2008

  7. Methods • Two identical saline primed ECMO circuits • Stockert S3, ½ inch drain, 3/8 inch return • 4.5 m2 Medtronic oxygenator • PAN 6 hemofilter • CVVH prescribed : IV pump vs. Diapact • Net even fluid balance • Varying ultrafiltration rates (0.5 – 2 L / hour) • Hourly weights of UF/Replacement bags, circuit pressures

  8. Results • 48 hourly measurements • 26 hours Alaris • 22 hours Diapact • No correlation between error rate and • Prescribed ultrafiltration rate • ECMO flow rate • CVVH blood flow rate

  9. Results - Alaris • Created a median 0.8% less ultrafiltrate per hour than prescribed (+7% to -12%) • Delivered a median of 4.3% less replacement fluid per hour than prescribed (+3% to -25%) • NET 3.5% of prescribed UF per hour dehydration to patient

  10. Examples with Alaris • 4 kg neonate on ECMO with 100 ml/hour prescribed UF rate and even fluid balance • 84 ml (21 ml/kg) fluid negative per day • 10 kg child on ECMO with 300 ml/hour prescribed UF rate and even fluid balance • 252 ml (25 ml/kg) fluid negative per day • 45 kg child on ECMO with 2000 ml/hour prescribed UF rate and even fluid balance • 1.68 L (37 ml/kg) fluid negative per day

  11. Results - Diapact • Created a median 1% more ultrafiltrate per hour than prescribed (+6% to -8%) • Delivered a median of 1% more replacement fluid per hour than prescribed (+10% to -7%)

  12. Examples Braun • Accurate when looking at medians over time • Hourly variation could be important in a hemodynamically unstable patient

  13. Conclusions • In this in vitro CVVH/ECMO model • Both the Alaris and Diapact methods had error rates that could be clinically significant • Careful physical assessment of the patient’s volume status is necessary • Further work is needed to develop more a accurate fluid management system for CRRT on ECMO

More Related