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The Impact of Levosimendan on Survival and Weaning from ECMO after Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation.

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OBJECTIVES Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (eCPR) is increasingly used due to its beneficial outcomes and results compared to conventional CPR. After cardiac arrest, the overall ejection fraction is severely impaired; thus,… Click to show full abstract

OBJECTIVES Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (eCPR) is increasingly used due to its beneficial outcomes and results compared to conventional CPR. After cardiac arrest, the overall ejection fraction is severely impaired; thus, weaning from ECMO is often prolonged or impossible. We hypothesized that early application of levosimendan in these patients facilitates ECMO weaning and survival. METHODS From 2016 until 2020, patients who underwent eCPR after cardiac arrest at our institution were analyzed retrospectively and divided into two groups: patients who received levosimendan during ICU stay (n=24) and those who did not receive levosimendan (n=84) and analyzed for outcome parameters. Furthermore, we used propensity-score matching and multinomial regression analysis to show the effect of levosimendan on outcome parameters. RESULTS Overall, in-hospital mortality was significantly lower in the group which received levosimendan (28% vs. 88%, p=<0.01), and ECMO weaning was more feasible in patients that received levosimendan (88% vs. 20%, p=<0.01). CPR duration until ECMO cannulation was significantly shorter in the levosimendan group (44+26 vs. 65+28, p=0.002); interestingly, the rate of mechanical chest compressions before ECMO cannulation was lower in the levosimendan group (50% vs. 69%, p=0.005). CONCLUSION In patients after cardiac arrest treated with eCPR, Levosimendan seems to contribute to higher success rates of ECMO weaning, potentially due to a short to mid-term increase in inotropy. Also, the survival after Levosimendan application was higher than patients who did not receive levosimendan.

Keywords: extracorporeal cardiopulmonary; weaning ecmo; levosimendan; survival; cardiopulmonary resuscitation

Journal Title: Artificial organs
Year Published: 2023

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