Abstract

Patients with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome require supportive treatment with mechanical ventilation with or without extracorporeal membrane oxygenation to maintain optimal oxygenation. Persistent inefficient blood oxygenation can be related to severity of clinical presentation, technical issues, or concomitant diseases. In this case report, man previously suffering from chronic myeloid leukemia received extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for influenza A virus subtype H1N1. Despite invasive oxygenation therapy, it was not possible to achieve amelioration of arterial blood oxygenation. After a differential diagnosis, pathological hyperleukocytosis was identified as a potential reason of oxygenation impairment, which improved after introduction of concomitant chemotherapy that lowered leukocytes count.

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