Innovative Percutaneous 3-Stitch Suture Technique for Site Closure in Venoarterial Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Decannulation Without Direct Artery Repair: A Case Series

Author:

Peng Kaiyi1,Hu Linhui12,Huang Xiangwei1,He Yuemei2,Wu Xinxin1,Li Huihua1,Zhang Wentao1,Zhu Hengling1,Wang Zheng1,Chen Chunbo3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Critical Care Medicine, Maoming People’s Hospital, Maoming, China

2. The Center of Scientific Research, Maoming People’s Hospital, Maoming, China

3. Department of Critical Care Medicine, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, The Second Clinical Medical College of Jinan University, The First Affiliated Hospital of Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen, China.

Abstract

No previous studies have reported the use of a percutaneous suture technique performed by bedside intensivists for site closure during decannulation without direct artery repair in venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) cases. Thus, the objective of this study was to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of this alternative approach. This retrospective study included 26 consecutive patients who underwent percutaneous VA-ECMO decannulation at Maoming People’s Hospital. Bedside percutaneous suture technique performed by intensivists facilitated cannula site closure. Primary outcome was successful closure without additional interventions. Secondary outcomes included procedural time, surgical conversion rate, complications (bleeding, vascular/wound complications, neuropathy, lymphocele), procedure-related death. Follow-up ultrasound were conducted within 6 months after discharge. All patients achieved successful site hemostasis with a median procedural time of 28 minutes. Procedure-related complications included minor bleeding (7.7%), acute lower limb ischemia (15.4%), venous thrombus (11.5%), minor arterial stenosis (7.7%), wound infection (4.2%), delayed healing (15.4%), and wound secondary suturing (6.3%). No procedure-related deaths occurred. Follow-up vascular ultrasound revealed two cases (7.7%) of minor arterial stenosis. The perivascular suture technique may offer intensivists a safe and effective alternative method for access site closure without direct artery suture during ECMO decannulation.

Funder

the Office of Talent Work Leading Team in Maoming

the High-level Hospital Construction Research Project of Maoming People’s Hospital

Excellent Young Talents Project of Maoming People’s Hospital

Medical Research Fund of Guangdong Province

Special Science and Technology Fund of Maoming City

the Science and Technology Programme of Maoming

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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