Abstract

Although reconstruction of the right common carotid artery (RCCA) in neonatal extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) patients is intuitively attractive, there is little known about prolonged arterial cannulation and how it may affect subsequent vascular repair. A histological study of RCCA segments from neonatal ECMO patients was performed, so that cannulation technique and catheter design could be optimized before proceeding with arterial reconstruction. Circumferential transmural necrosis (CTN) was found in 25 of 31 (80%) arteriotomy specimens in comparison with 2 of 9 (20%) more proximal carotid specimens; the remaining specimens in each group demonstrated either focal subintimal or focal transmural necrosis. CTN was more common in patients with longer ECMO runs (96 ± 5.9 versus 75 ± 5.6 hours, P = .009; arteriotomy site), but was independent of cannula size, birthweight, and gestational age. Eleven patients have undergone RCCA reconstruction. Doppler flow studies at 4 to 7 months of follow-up in five patients demonstrated slightly higher right-sided versus left-sided peak systolic, end-diastolic, and mean flow velocities. No neurological or developmental problems could be attributed to vascular reconstruction. In conclusion, RCCA reconstruction is technically feasible, but due to the high prevalence of CTN at the arteriotomy site, excision of this segment is recommended at the time of arterial repair.

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