Integral assessment of gas exchange during veno-arterial ECMO: accuracy and precision of a modified Fick principle in a porcine model.
David C BergerLena ZwickerKay NettelbeckDaniela CasoniPaul Phillipp HeinischHansjörg JenniMatthias HaenggiLuciano GattinoniKaspar F BachmannPublished in: American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology (2022)
Assessment of native cardiac output during extracorporeal circulation is challenging. We assessed a modified Fick principle under conditions such as dead space and shunt in 13 anesthetized swine undergoing centrally cannulated veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (V-A ECMO, 308 measurement periods) therapy. We assumed that the ratio of carbon dioxide elimination (V̇co 2 ) or oxygen uptake (V̇o 2 ) between the membrane and native lung corresponds to the ratio of respective blood flows. Unequal ventilation/perfusion (V̇/Q̇) ratios were corrected towards unity. Pulmonary blood flow was calculated and compared to an ultrasonic flow probe on the pulmonary artery with a bias of 99 mL/min (limits of agreement -542 to 741 mL/min) with blood content V̇o 2 and no-shunt, no-dead space conditions, which showed good trending ability (least significant change from 82 to 129 mL). Shunt conditions led to underestimation of native pulmonary blood flow (bias -395, limits of agreement -1,290 to 500 mL/min). Bias and trending further depended on the gas (O 2 , CO 2 ) and measurement approach (blood content vs. gas phase). Measurements in the gas phase increased the bias (253 [LoA -1,357 to 1,863 mL/min] for expired V̇o 2 bias 482 [LoA -760 to 1,724 mL/min] for expired V̇co 2 ) and could be improved by correction of V̇/Q̇ inequalities. Our results show that common assumptions of the Fick principle in two competing circulations give results with adequate accuracy and may offer a clinically applicable tool. Precision depends on specific conditions. This highlights the complexity of gas exchange in membrane lungs and may further deepen the understanding of V-A ECMO.
Keyphrases
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- blood flow
- pulmonary artery
- pulmonary hypertension
- carbon dioxide
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- respiratory failure
- coronary artery
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- mechanical ventilation
- room temperature
- magnetic resonance imaging
- quantum dots
- bone marrow
- left ventricular
- magnetic resonance
- heart failure