CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Long-term ECMO treatment in Jehovah's Witness patient without transfusions.

Perfusion 2012 July
A previously healthy 60-year-old male presented with fever, general pain and a C-reactive protein (CRP) of 160 mg/L. He was prescribed doxycycline. In the emergency room three days later, he was intubated and had a saturation of 70% on 100% oxygen. The chest X-ray showed bilateral lobar pneumonia. Streptococcus pneumonia was later verified. As a Jehovah's Witness, he had refused blood transfusions, but accepted albumin. Two days after admission, veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (V-V ECMO) was started and the patient was then transported on ECMO to Stockholm. After two days, echocardiography showed right cardiac failure and the patient had to be converted to veno-arterial ECMO (VV-A ECMO) by cannulation of the left femoral artery. The haemoglobin decreased from 10.0 to 6.0 g/dL. Iron, folic acid, and erythropoietin were administered to stimulate erythropoesis. Romiplostim, to stimulate the production of platelets, was also started immediately. Blood samples were reduced to a minimum. The ECMO circuit was changed twice, using saline for priming, and the blood in the old circuit was then given back to the patient. The haemoglobin concentration varied between 4.5 and 6.0 g/dL during the ECMO treatment and the platelets between 80 and 140 x10(9)/L. After 44 days on ECMO, the patient was weaned off ECMO with 50% oxygen and nitric oxide (NO) at 20ppm in the ventilator. Four days after decannulation, he was transferred to a nearby intensive care unit. Long-term ECMO treatment without transfusion of blood products is possible. Being a Jehovah's Witness should not automatically be a contraindication for ECMO.

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