
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Based on a voicemail message we received from Justin Cook, an Emergency Physician out of Portland, Oregon, this episode focuses on the cognitive task analysis of using ultrasound during ECPR.
When your patient hits the door with CPR in progress, what is your ultrasound priority? Diagnostics? Ultrasound-guided line placement? This episode of the EDECMO podcast attempts to answer that question.
This is a snapshot of a patient we discussed who presented with tearing chest pain and arrested with HR 180 narrow-complex. pericardial tamponade relieved with drain placed by Bellezzo. Still no pulses. We put him on ECMO and he was taken to the OR: he had back-dissected into his AV. After ECMO the patient was taken to the OR where his AV was resuspended and the ascending aorta grafted. He left the hospital neuro-intact. In this case, diagnostic US took precedence over line placement. But this is a caveat to the usual rule that US-guided line placement is most urgent.
And here is a video clip of the tamponade:
dissection video from Joe Bellezzo on Vimeo.
Thanks for listening!
Hey! wait! while you’re here give us a call on the listener voicemail line! Comments, Criticisms, or Questions may be incorporated into future episodes: 1-470-ED ECMO 1 (470-333-2661).
Or leave your comments below.
By Zack Shinar, MD4.6
8787 ratings
Based on a voicemail message we received from Justin Cook, an Emergency Physician out of Portland, Oregon, this episode focuses on the cognitive task analysis of using ultrasound during ECPR.
When your patient hits the door with CPR in progress, what is your ultrasound priority? Diagnostics? Ultrasound-guided line placement? This episode of the EDECMO podcast attempts to answer that question.
This is a snapshot of a patient we discussed who presented with tearing chest pain and arrested with HR 180 narrow-complex. pericardial tamponade relieved with drain placed by Bellezzo. Still no pulses. We put him on ECMO and he was taken to the OR: he had back-dissected into his AV. After ECMO the patient was taken to the OR where his AV was resuspended and the ascending aorta grafted. He left the hospital neuro-intact. In this case, diagnostic US took precedence over line placement. But this is a caveat to the usual rule that US-guided line placement is most urgent.
And here is a video clip of the tamponade:
dissection video from Joe Bellezzo on Vimeo.
Thanks for listening!
Hey! wait! while you’re here give us a call on the listener voicemail line! Comments, Criticisms, or Questions may be incorporated into future episodes: 1-470-ED ECMO 1 (470-333-2661).
Or leave your comments below.

78,709 Listeners

30,670 Listeners

43,633 Listeners

27,038 Listeners

1,875 Listeners

541 Listeners

94 Listeners

1,468 Listeners

276 Listeners

56,962 Listeners

24,564 Listeners

1,142 Listeners

257 Listeners

441 Listeners

272 Listeners