Abstract

Cardiogenic shock continues to be a life-threatening condition carrying a high mortality and morbidity, where the prognosis remains poor despite intensive modern treatment modalities. In recent years, mainly technical improvements have led to a more widespread use of short- and long-term mechanical circulatory support, such as veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) and left ventricular assist devices (LVADs). Currently, LVADs are indispensable as ‘bridge’ to cardiac recovery, heart transplantation (HTX), and/or as destination therapy Importantly, both LVADs and HTX put a vast burden on financial resources, besides significant short- and long-term risks of morbidity and mortality. These considerations underscore the importance of optimal timing and appropriate patient selection for LVAD therapy, avoiding as much as possible an unfortunate and costly clinical path. In this report, we present a series of three cases with acute refractory cardiogenic shock (‘crash and burn’, INTERMACS profile 1) successfully treated by ECMO and early optimal medical therapy preventing a certain path towards LVAD and/or HTX, for which they were initially referred. This conservative approach in INTERMACS profile one patients warrants very early introduction of adequate medical heart failure therapy under the umbrella of a combination of short-term mechanical circulatory and inotropic support by phosphodiesterase inhibitors. Therefore, this novel combined medical-mechanical approach could have important clinical implications for this extremely challenging patient category, as it may avoid an unnecessary and costly clinical path towards LVAD and/or heart transplantation.

Highlights

  • Cardiogenic shock continues to be a highly dangerous condition carrying considerable risk of mortality and morbidity despite all currently available treatment modalities

  • We present a series of cases with acute, severe and refractory cardiogenic shock, successfully treated with ‘short-term’ extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support and optimised medical therapy preventing a certain path towards left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) and/or heart transplantation

  • ECMO is reported to be successful as a bridge-to-recovery in out-of-hospital patients presenting with severe cardiogenic shock [4,5,6]

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Summary

SPECIAL ARTICLE

A case series with acute refractory cardiogenic shock treated with veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and optimised medical strategy. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com

Introduction
Patient A
Patient B
Age Gender Medical history Complaints
Episode of thrombocytopenia and HIT
Endomyocardial biopsy negative
Discussion
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