16 research outputs found

    Severe Neonatal Pertussis Treated by Leukodepletion and Early Extra Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation.

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    We report the case of a 17-day-old infant with severe pertussis for whom the early initiation of veno-arterial extra corporeal membrane oxygenation and leukodepletion strategies (exchange transfusion and leukofiltration) allowed to reduce leukocytosis and pulmonary hypertension, thus leading to survival. These invasive techniques can be considered when severe pulmonary hypertension complicates hyperleukocytosis in neonates

    0344: Why levosimendan should be considered for the treatment of viral myocarditis in children

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    BackgroundAnimal studies showed that levosimendan protects cardiomyocytes against apoptotic cell death in acute viral myocarditis. In addition to its inotropic properties, levosimendan seems to prevent the detrimental effects of oxidative stress and to limit cardiomyocyte loss.AimTo analyze the outcome of children who received levosimendan for acute or fulminant viral myocarditis.Patients and methodsRetrospective single center study covering the period 2007- 2013. All children (<18 years) with viral myocarditis were treated, in association with epinephrine and/or milrinone, with a 24-hours infusion of levosimendan. Clinical, biological and echocardiographic evolutions were analyzed.ResultsBetween 2007 and 2013, 18 successive children were treated, 9 for acute myocarditis and 9 for fulminant myocarditis (according to the international clinicopathological classification). Median age was 4 years (1.1-11) and median weight was 15kg (10-40). BNP level significantly decreased 48 hours after the beginning of the infusion (4599ng/L [2698-9266] vs 1928ng/L [848-4557], p=0.05). No dialysis was necessary. Among the fulminant myocarditis group, 1 patient (11%) required early mechanical circulatory support with a limitation of care due to severe neurologic complications. 13 patients (72%) recovered a LVEF >55% (100% for the acute myocarditis group). 1 patient had heart transplantation 18 months later.ConlusionIn our experience, levosimendan was efficient for the inotropic support of acute and fulminant viral myocarditis. We believe that its cardioprotective effect enabled us to limit the use of mechanical assistance (only 11% of the fulminant forms) and allowed a recovering of the cardiac function for the majority of the patients. Although further clinical studies are needed to confirm these data, levosimendan should be systematically considered for the treatment of these critical patients
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