Selected article for: "critical patient and invasive mechanical ventilation"

Author: Ghizlane, El Aidouni; Manal, Merbouh; Sara, Berrajaa; Choukri, Bahouh; Samia, Berrichi; Abderrahim, El Kaouini; Hamid, Ziani; Amine, Bouabdallaoui; Houssam, Bkiyar; Brahim, Housni
Title: Early initiation of awake venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in critical COVID-19 pneumonia: A case reports
  • Cord-id: uwrycuzt
  • Document date: 2021_7_29
  • ID: uwrycuzt
    Snippet: INTRODUCTION: Overall, patients with Sars-cov-2 disease treated with mechanical ventilation, which is not the case in our study. This report presents our first successful experience of awake ECMO application in a critical patient with hypoxemic Respiratory Failure related to COVID-19 infection in Morocco. CASE MANAGEMENT: We have reported a 52-year-old female patient who was diagnosed with COVID-19 infection and progressed to critical cases. She was a candidate for applying awake extracorporeal
    Document: INTRODUCTION: Overall, patients with Sars-cov-2 disease treated with mechanical ventilation, which is not the case in our study. This report presents our first successful experience of awake ECMO application in a critical patient with hypoxemic Respiratory Failure related to COVID-19 infection in Morocco. CASE MANAGEMENT: We have reported a 52-year-old female patient who was diagnosed with COVID-19 infection and progressed to critical cases. She was a candidate for applying awake extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in the absence of invasive mechanical ventilation, under local anesthesia alone with good progress and ventilatory weaning. CONCLUSION: This therapeutic attitude can be beneficial for certain critical and severe cases due to COVID-19 infection. Each ECMO program should develop goals, methods, protocols, and best practices while adapting appropriately to the personnel and equipment available.

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