EMCrit Podcast 121 – REBOA - a podcast by Scott D. Weingart, MD FCCM

from 2014-04-06T19:05:12

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Today, I got to interview one of the superstars at Shock Trauma on REBOA (resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta).



Balloon occlusion of the aorta was first described in 1954 (Surgery 1954;36(1):65). Other older articles include (Ann Emerg Med 1986;15(12):1466, J Endovasc Ther 2000;7(1):1, Endovasc Ther 2005;12(5):556).

The Shock Trauma Center (STC) Approach to REBOA

Gain Access to the Common Femoral Artery with Femoral A-line Kit



* Just like normal, except make sure you are hitting common femoral and not superficial femoral artery. The point of entry should be 2cm below inguinal ligament (estimate ligament by anterior superior iliac to pubic tubercle). This may be much higher than you are used to.

* Use either 18 arterial line set or Cook 5f Central Venous Cath (G02070)



Float the Wire



* STC uses Boston Scientific Amplatz superstiff wires (0.035in/260 cm/straight floppy tip)

* Measure externally from the catheter to the level of the 2nd rib--mark this level on the wire (At STC, they use Avery 5422 stickers)

* Advance the wire floppy-end first to the marked depth

* Confirm location with either radiograph or fluoro before proceeding

* Mark the proximal end of the wire with a pen on the sterile drape



Place the Sheath



* At STC, they use a Check-Flo Performer Introducer (12 fr, 30cm)

* Remove the femoral artery catheter

* Measure the introducer externally from groin to just below the umbilicus (make sure you are measuring the catheter, not the dilator). Mark with a sticker

* In some cases, you need to dilate the vessel to accept the introducer; in most cases the internal dilator is sufficient

* Place the introducer to the previously marked level

* Critical Move: Removal of the dilator can screw everything up. The operator should lock the sideport of the dilator between their fingers and grip tight and with the other hand, hold the wire proximally. Allow assistant to pin and pull the dilator. If they mess up, you are still controlling the sheath and the wire. If some of the wire gets pulled, have your assistant reinsert without you letting go of sheath or wire.



Place the Coda Catheter/Balloon



* Grab a CODA balloon catheter (32 mm-balloon)

* Measure externally; Zone 1 is measured to the xiphoid, Zone 3 is measured to just above the umbilicus. Measure at the proximal portion of the balloon



from J Trauma. 2011 Dec;71(6):1869-72



 



* Remove all air from the balloon using saline syringe

* Insert the CODA catheter

* The wire stays stationary throughout



Inflate the Balloon



* Use a 30 ml syringe, ideally filled with 20 ml of NS and 10 ml of omnipaque (lohexol); use just saline if contrast not available

* Inflate until resistance goes to moderate (would love to know what luminal pressure this corresponds to). In general, this corresponds to 12-22 mls depending on the size of the aorta--but this must be individualized to the patient. The actual infaltion is far harder than you may think. For me, it is the maximal force I can apply with 1 hand.



Secure Everything for Transport



* Here's how they do it at STC







* Mark the levels of everything so you can verify there has been no migration



Get an Xray when time allows

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