12 research outputs found
Comparison of Serial and Parallel Connections of Membrane Lungs against Refractory Hypoxemia in a Mock Circuit
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is an important rescue therapy method
for the treatment of severe hypoxic lung injury. In some cases, oxygen saturation and oxygen partial
pressure in the arterial blood are low despite ECMO therapy. There are case reports in which patients
with such instances of refractory hypoxemia received a second membrane lung, either in series or in
parallel, to overcome the hypoxemia. It remains unclear whether the parallel or serial connection
is more effective. Therefore, we used an improved version of our full-flow ECMO mock circuit to
test this. The measurements were performed under conditions in which the membrane lungs were
unable to completely oxygenate the blood. As a result, only the photometric pre- and post-oxygenator
saturations, blood flow and hemoglobin concentration were required for the calculation of oxygen
transfer rates. The results showed that for a pre-oxygenator saturation of 45% and a total blood flow of
10 L/min, the serial connection of two identical 5 L rated oxygenators is 17% more effective in terms
of oxygen transfer than the parallel connection. Although the idea of using a second membrane lung
if refractory hypoxia occurs is intriguing from a physiological point of view, due to the invasiveness
of the solution, further investigations are needed before this should be used in a wider clinical setting
A mock circulation loop to test extracorporeal CO2 elimination setups
Background: Extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (ECCO2R) is a promising yet
limited researched therapy for hypercapnic respiratory failure in acute respiratory
distress syndrome and exacerbated chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Herein,
we describe a new mock circuit that enables experimental ECCO2R research without
animal models. In a second step, we use this model to investigate three experimental
scenarios of ECCO2R: (I) the influence of hemoglobin concentration on CO2 removal. (II)
a potentially portable ECCO2R that uses air instead of oxygen, (III) a low-flow ECCO2R
that achieves effective CO2 clearance by recirculation and acidification of the limited
blood volume of a small dual lumen cannula (such as a dialysis catheter).
Results: With the presented ECCO2R mock, CO2 removal rates comparable to previous
studies were obtained. The mock works with either fresh porcine blood or diluted
expired human packed red blood cells. However, fresh porcine blood was preferred
because of better handling and availability. In the second step of this work, hemoglobin
concentration was identified as an important factor for CO2 removal. In the second
scenario, an air-driven ECCO2R setup showed only a slightly lower CO2 wash-out than the
same setup with pure oxygen as sweep gas. In the last scenario, the low-flow ECCO2R,
the blood flow at the test membrane lung was successfully raised with a recirculation
channel without the need to increase cannula flow. Low recirculation ratios resulted in
increased efficiency, while high recirculation ratios caused slightly reduced CO2 removal
rates. Acidification of the CO2 depleted blood in the recirculation channel caused an
increase in CO2 removal rate.
Conclusions: We demonstrate a simple and cost effective, yet powerful, “in-vitro”
ECCO2R model that can be used as an alternative to animal experiments for many
research scenarios. Moreover, in our approach parameters such as hemoglobin level can
be modified more easily than in animal models
Comparison of Circular and Parallel-Plated Membrane Lungs for Extracorporeal Carbon Dioxide Elimination
Extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (ECCO2R) is an important technique to treat critical lung diseases such as exacerbated chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and mild or
moderate acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). This study applies our previously presented
ECCO2R mock circuit to compare the CO2 removal capacity of circular versus parallel-plated membrane lungs at different sweep gas flow rates (0.5, 2, 4, 6 L/min) and blood flow rates (0.3 L/min,
0.9 L/min). For both designs, two low-flow polypropylene membrane lungs (Medos Hilte 1000,
Quadrox-i Neonatal) and two mid-flow polymethylpentene membrane lungs (Novalung Minilung,
Quadrox-iD Pediatric) were compared. While the parallel-plated Quadrox-iD Pediatric achieved the
overall highest CO2 removal rates under medium and high sweep gas flow rates, the two circular
membrane lungs performed relatively better at the lowest gas flow rate of 0.5 L/min. The low-flow
Hilite 1000, although overall better than the Quadrox i-Neonatal, had the most significant advantage
at a gas flow of 0.5 L/min. Moreover, the circular Minilung, despite being significantly less efficient
than the Quadrox-iD Pediatric at medium and high sweep gas flow rates, did not show a significantly
worse CO2 removal rate at a gas flow of 0.5 L/min but rather a slight advantage. We suggest that
circular membrane lungs have an advantage at low sweep gas flow rates due to reduced shunting as
a result of their fiber orientation. Efficiency for such low gas flow scenarios might be relevant for
possible future portable ECCO2R devices
A Novel Mock Circuit to Test Full-Flow Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has become an important therapeutic
approach in the COVID-19 pandemic. The development and research in this field strongly relies on
animal models; however, efforts are being made to find alternatives. In this work, we present a new
mock circuit for ECMO that allows measurements of the oxygen transfer rate of a membrane lung at
full ECMO blood flow. The mock utilizes a large reservoir of heparinized porcine blood to measure the
oxygen transfer rate of the membrane lung in a single passage. The oxygen transfer rate is calculated
from blood flow, hemoglobin value, venous saturation, and post-membrane arterial oxygen pressure.
Before the next measuring sequence, the blood is regenerated to a venous condition with a sweep
gas of nitrogen and carbon dioxide. The presented mock was applied to investigate the effect of a
recirculation loop on the oxygen transfer rate of an ECMO setup. The recirculation loop caused a
significant increase in post-membrane arterial oxygen pressure (paO2
). The effect was strongest for
the highest recirculation flow. This was attributed to a smaller boundary layer on gas fibers due to
the increased blood velocity. However, the increase in paO2 did not translate to significant increases
in the oxygen transfer rate because of the minor significance of physically dissolved oxygen for gas
transfer. In conclusion, our results regarding a new ECMO mock setup demonstrate that recirculation
loops can improve ECMO performance, but not enough to be clinically relevant
High-Repetition Rate Optical Pump–Nuclear Resonance Probe Experiments Identify Transient Molecular Vibrations after Photoexcitation of a Spin Crossover Material
Phonon modes play a vital role in the cooperative phenomenon of light-induced spin transitions in spin crossover (SCO) molecular complexes. Although the cooperative vibrations, which occur over several hundreds of picoseconds to nanoseconds after photoexcitation, are understood to play a crucial role in this phase transition, they have not been precisely identified. Therefore, we have performed a novel optical laser pump–nuclear resonance probe experiment to identify the Fe-projected vibrational density of states (pDOS) during the first few nanoseconds after laser excitation of the mononuclear Fe(II) SCO complex [Fe(PM-BiA)(NCS)]. Evaluation of the so obtained nanosecond-resolved pDOS yields an excitation of ∼8% of the total volume of the complex from the low-spin to high-spin state. Density functional theory calculations allow simulation of the observed changes in the pDOS and thus identification of the transient inter- and intramolecular vibrational modes at nanosecond time scales
A Novel Mock Circuit to Test Full-Flow Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has become an important therapeutic approach in the COVID-19 pandemic. The development and research in this field strongly relies on animal models; however, efforts are being made to find alternatives. In this work, we present a new mock circuit for ECMO that allows measurements of the oxygen transfer rate of a membrane lung at full ECMO blood flow. The mock utilizes a large reservoir of heparinized porcine blood to measure the oxygen transfer rate of the membrane lung in a single passage. The oxygen transfer rate is calculated from blood flow, hemoglobin value, venous saturation, and post-membrane arterial oxygen pressure. Before the next measuring sequence, the blood is regenerated to a venous condition with a sweep gas of nitrogen and carbon dioxide. The presented mock was applied to investigate the effect of a recirculation loop on the oxygen transfer rate of an ECMO setup. The recirculation loop caused a significant increase in post-membrane arterial oxygen pressure (paO2). The effect was strongest for the highest recirculation flow. This was attributed to a smaller boundary layer on gas fibers due to the increased blood velocity. However, the increase in paO2 did not translate to significant increases in the oxygen transfer rate because of the minor significance of physically dissolved oxygen for gas transfer. In conclusion, our results regarding a new ECMO mock setup demonstrate that recirculation loops can improve ECMO performance, but not enough to be clinically relevant