ecmo coagulation

27
COAGULATION ISSUES ON ECMO 2010 Endothelial activation Thrombin / clot formation Action of heparin Bleeding protocol Clinical relevance

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Page 1: Ecmo Coagulation

COAGULATION ISSUES ON ECMO 2010

Endothelial activationThrombin / clot formationAction of heparinBleeding protocolClinical relevance

Page 2: Ecmo Coagulation

CLOTS IN CIRCUIT• 29% of neonates

BLEEDING• 41% of neonates• 28% of children• 45% of cardiac

patients• 47% of adults

Incidence of bleeding (ELSO 1998)

Page 3: Ecmo Coagulation

• Fibrinogen adsorption• Platelet activation• Contact activation• Thrombin generation despite heparin• Plasminogen activation• Continued thrombotic stimulus

Why does blood clot when exposed to an ECMO circuit?

Page 4: Ecmo Coagulation

Clotting cascade

Page 5: Ecmo Coagulation

Activates contact pathway factor 12

Protein monolayer

Fibrinogen adsoprtion on circuit

• Any foreign surface is thrombogenic• Fibrinogen coats foreign surface or damaged endothelium• Occurs in thick dense MOLOLAYER (1000 x concentration of plasma)• Process is unpredicatble : different tissues / different time period

Page 6: Ecmo Coagulation

factor 12

fibrinogen

+

Contact PATHWA

Y

Cytokinesplatelets

“Contact Activation”

Page 7: Ecmo Coagulation

Platelet activation

Fibrinogen

Platelet(non activated)

Activated platelet

Thrombin binding site

Endothelium

CYTOKINES

Page 8: Ecmo Coagulation

AntithrombinProtein CProtein STissue factor inhibitor

Thrombin

Anticoagheparin

thrombinplatelet

ANTICOAGULANT

Thrombin generation

PRO-COAGULANT

Page 9: Ecmo Coagulation

Thrombin

Fibrinogen 3. Fibrin

A

B Insoluble fibrin

4. tPA can dissolve

1.Platelets

2. Factor X111

crosslinked

Fibrin formation via thrombin (PROCOAGULANT)

Page 10: Ecmo Coagulation

Fibrinogen / platelet mesh

Page 11: Ecmo Coagulation

• Heparin unable to get into monolayer• Accelerates antithrombin x 1000• No effect on platelets

Procoagulant surface overwhelming

heparin

Action of Heparin as ANTICOAGULANT

Page 12: Ecmo Coagulation

Antithrombin IIIProtein CProtein STissue factor inhibitor

Thrombin

ANTICOAGULANTS

Procoag

Thrombin activated fibrin

fibrin

Heparin thrombin interaction

Page 13: Ecmo Coagulation

Clot formationThrombogenic

surface

ThrombinProtein CProtein STissue factor inhibitor

Heparin

fibrinogen

CLOT

Antithrombin

platelets

fibrin

History ECMO

Page 14: Ecmo Coagulation

Action of Heparin: Clotting cascade

Page 15: Ecmo Coagulation

Heparin does not dissolve clots

Clot formation

Page 16: Ecmo Coagulation

Anticoagulants

Page 17: Ecmo Coagulation

• Massive tissue factor release on ECMO• Overwhelming procoagulant state• Platelets and thrombin activated• Fibrinogen meshwork forms

• HEPARIN DOES NOT DISSOLVE CLOTS

• HEPARIN PREVENTS NEW CLOTS FORMING

HEPARIN ANTICOAGULATION

Page 18: Ecmo Coagulation

1 unit of heparin (the "Howell Unit") is an amount required to keep 1 mL of cat's blood fluid for 24 hours at 0°C.

Heparin

Page 19: Ecmo Coagulation

• Standard unfractionated heparin will be used for routine anticoagulation for all children on ECMO

• Standard concentration of 1ml = 20u/kg/hr(20 x wt x 50u Heparin in 50ml 0.9% saline)

• Heparin dose at cannulation = 75u/kg (on surgeons instructions)

• Start infusion of 20 u/kg/hr when ACT < 300• Maintain ACT between 160 -180 seconds and

monitor and record ACT's HOURLY

Standard Heparin Anticoagulation

Page 20: Ecmo Coagulation

Ann Thorac Surg 2007;83:912–20

ASAIO Journal 2007; 53:111-114

Wide variation between ACT’sAnd heparin delivery betweenPatients and in same patient

Page 21: Ecmo Coagulation

ACT vs Anti Xa levels with heparin

Page 22: Ecmo Coagulation

ACT’s do NOT reflect anticoagulation cascade with accuracy

DO NOT interpret in isolation

Always recheck abnormal values

Page 23: Ecmo Coagulation

Increasing heparin to target value• Bolus 25u/kg and escalate dose by 5u/kg/hr until target ACT

reached • Measure ACT every 15 min till ACT Target achieved • If > 50ug/kg/hr heparin is needed then check antithrombin level • Platelet transfusions may increase requierments for ECMO

Decreasing heparin to target value• Reduce by 5u/kg/hr until target ACT reached. • Measure ACT every 15 min until Target reached • DO NOT STOP HEPARIN regardless of ACT (see bleeding

protocol and discuss with ECMO lead)

Targeting Heparin effect with ACT

Page 24: Ecmo Coagulation

• Standard ACT target 160 to 180 sec• Bleeding (reduce heparin) 140 to 160 sec• Major Bleeding add Tranexamic acid

• Microdose heparin don’t use ACT10 u/kg/hr

Bleeding protocol

Page 25: Ecmo Coagulation

van der Staak,F.H. et al J Ped Surg 1997;32(4):594-599

• Reduced surgical bleedingo (57 v 390 mL, P = .005)

• Lower RBC transfusion o (1.13 v 2.95 mL/kg/h, P = .03).

• 2 patients with severe thrombotic complications

• Dose o bolus 4 mg/kg o infusion of 1 mg/kg/h

Tranexamic acid

Page 26: Ecmo Coagulation

Bleeding protocol: Last resort: Factor 7

Page 27: Ecmo Coagulation

Clot formation: Patient or circuit

If ECMO flow stopped for > 5 minutes: consider thrombus risk