2. Proctor’s Playbook: VA-ECMO

CathMasters Drs. Nazli Okumus and Daniel Ambinder, along with expert faculty Drs. Ann Gage and Marwan Jumean, walk through the step-by-step procedural approach to VA-ECMO (veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation) cannulation. Building on the Data to Delivery episode, this Proctor Playbook episode covers pre-procedural planning, cannula selection, team composition and equipment, the role of the distal perfusion cannula (DPC), decision-making on mechanical left ventricular (LV) unloading, anticoagulation dosing and timing, the cannulation procedure itself, and vascular closure strategies during decannulation. The hypothetical case continues with the 36-year-old man with fulminant myocarditis, biventricular failure, and cardiogenic shock. Audio editing for this episode was performed by CardioNerds Intern, Dr. Julia Marques Fernandes.  CathMasters is for educational purposes only. CathMasters is for educational purposes only. Music by Elijah K (https://pixabay.com/users/elijah_k-40...) from Pixabay (https://pixabay.com/music//?utm_sourc...) Pearls 1. “Cannulation for VA-ECMO is a team sport.” Success begins with pre-procedural planning: review the patient’s history, prior vascular imaging, echocardiography, invasive hemodynamics, labs, and EKG to phenotype the shock (left, right, or biventricular) and select the appropriate support configuration and cannula sizes. 2. The distal perfusion cannula (DPC) should be the standard of care. Meta-analyses demonstrate that prophylactic DPC placement reduces limb ischemia by ~60% (OR 0.31–0.41). A practical tip from Dr. Gage: perform the antegrade SFA stick for the DPC simultaneously with the retrograde CFA stick before upsizing — this avoids the difficulty of obtaining antegrade access after a large arterial cannula is already in place. 3. Heparin dosing at cannulation: administer an initial bolus of 50–100 U/kg of unfractionated heparin (UFH) after access but before dilation. For a 70 kg patient, this is approximately 5,000 units. Maintain anticoagulation with a UFH infusion targeting ACT 180–220 seconds, aPTT 1.5–2.5× baseline, or anti-Xa 0.3–0.7 IU/mL. 4. Consider upsizing the dilator 1–2 French above the intended cannula size (e.g., dilate to 27F for a 25F venous cannula) to facilitate smooth cannula insertion. Dr. Jumean’s pro tip: after removing the dilator, check wire movement before advancing the cannula — a kinked wire during dilation is a preventable but dangerous complication. 5. Percutaneous decannulation is an evolving and viable alternative to surgical cutdown. Pre-closing at the time of cannulation (two Perclose ProGlide devices per site) enables percutaneous explantation with technical success rates of 91–95% and lower groin infection rates compared with surgical cutdown. Notes 1. Pre-Procedural Planning • VA-ECMO cannulation requires significant pre-planning and coordination, even when time is limited. The operator should review all primary data with the team before proceeding. • Key data to review: • Echocardiography: Biventricular function, valvular disease (especially aortic insufficiency and mitral regurgitation), wall motion abnormalities, and chamber sizes. Echo also helps refine the differential diagnosis (e.g., regional wall motion abnormalities suggest CAD; flail mitral leaflet suggests delayed MI complication). • Invasive hemodynamics (PA catheter): Phenotype the shock as left-dominant, right-dominant, or biventricular. This determines the support configuration (VA-ECMO alone vs. VA-ECMO + LV unloading vs. VAV-ECMO for additional oxygenation). • Prior vascular imaging: Review prior angiograms or CT scans of the femoral/iliac vessels to assess vessel size, tortuosity, calcification, and PAD. This informs cannula sizing and access strategy. • EKG and labs: Confirm diagnosis, assess for arrhythmias, and evaluate organ function (renal, hepatic, coagulation). • Dr. Gage’s program uses a formal ECMO timeout before cannulation — a checklist that reviews indications, contraindications, equipment, and team roles. 1. Equipment and Team • Team composition: Cannulating operator (interventional cardiologist, cardiac surgeon, or critical care physician), assistant (fellow or second operator), perfusionist (to prime and manage the circuit), ICU or cath lab nurse, and...

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