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Hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: A retrospective observational cohort

BACKGROUND: Acute limb ischemia due to microvascular malperfusion may be refractory to initial therapies. Medicinal leech therapy (hirudotherapy) has been attempted in plastic and reconstructive surgery to improve venous congestion in ischemic flaps; however, there are minimal reports related to isc...

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Autores principales: Resch, Joseph C., Hedstrom, Rachel, Steiner, Marie E., Said, Sameh M., Somani, Arif
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9849792/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36683785
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.1011171
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author Resch, Joseph C.
Hedstrom, Rachel
Steiner, Marie E.
Said, Sameh M.
Somani, Arif
author_facet Resch, Joseph C.
Hedstrom, Rachel
Steiner, Marie E.
Said, Sameh M.
Somani, Arif
author_sort Resch, Joseph C.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Acute limb ischemia due to microvascular malperfusion may be refractory to initial therapies. Medicinal leech therapy (hirudotherapy) has been attempted in plastic and reconstructive surgery to improve venous congestion in ischemic flaps; however, there are minimal reports related to ischemia secondary to arterial malperfusion. We evaluated a pediatric cohort from an academic intensive care unit with refractory limb ischemia in whom hirudotherapy was attempted to elucidate its use and outcomes. METHOD: Institutional patient database was queried to identify pediatric patients (<18 years) who received hirudotherapy in the pediatric critical care unit and met inclusion/exclusion criteria. Patient charts were evaluated for indices including demographics, primary disease, coagulative status, vascular access, vasoactive medication dosing, bleeding, leech use, limb and mortality outcomes. Data was evaluated to identify trends or suspected impact on outcomes. RESULTS: Hirudotherapy was used in 7 patients for limb ischemia, 5 with congenital heart disease, and 2 others with viremic shock. Time to leech application following recognition of ischemia averaged 3 days, with duration of use averaging 3.9 days. Five patients discontinued therapy due to bleeding. Mortality rate was 57%, all secondary to multiorgan failure. In 3 surviving patients, 4 of 5 treated limbs resulted in at minimum partial amputation. Vasoactive-inotropic score tended higher prior to leech application, suggesting a vasoconstrictive pathway for arterial malperfusion. No identifiable trends appeared associated with salvaged limb or adverse effects. Blood loss predictably increased with leech application, as did total transfusion requirement. CONCLUSION: This case series establishes baseline data for use of hirudotherapy in critically ill children with acute limb ischemia caused by arterial malperfusion. Based on this retrospective cohort, we cannot recommend routine use of hirudotherapy for acute limb ischemia from arterial malperfusion in the pediatric intensive care unit. Application of leeches should be aligned with a protocol defining start and stop parameters, standardized leech utilization, and monitoring for adverse outcomes. Future study would benefit from consensus definitions of study outcomes, including perfusion recovery, tissue/limb salvage and bleeding manifestations. Additional prospective studies are needed prior to any standard or systematic recommendations for use.
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spelling pubmed-98497922023-01-20 Hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: A retrospective observational cohort Resch, Joseph C. Hedstrom, Rachel Steiner, Marie E. Said, Sameh M. Somani, Arif Front Pediatr Pediatrics BACKGROUND: Acute limb ischemia due to microvascular malperfusion may be refractory to initial therapies. Medicinal leech therapy (hirudotherapy) has been attempted in plastic and reconstructive surgery to improve venous congestion in ischemic flaps; however, there are minimal reports related to ischemia secondary to arterial malperfusion. We evaluated a pediatric cohort from an academic intensive care unit with refractory limb ischemia in whom hirudotherapy was attempted to elucidate its use and outcomes. METHOD: Institutional patient database was queried to identify pediatric patients (<18 years) who received hirudotherapy in the pediatric critical care unit and met inclusion/exclusion criteria. Patient charts were evaluated for indices including demographics, primary disease, coagulative status, vascular access, vasoactive medication dosing, bleeding, leech use, limb and mortality outcomes. Data was evaluated to identify trends or suspected impact on outcomes. RESULTS: Hirudotherapy was used in 7 patients for limb ischemia, 5 with congenital heart disease, and 2 others with viremic shock. Time to leech application following recognition of ischemia averaged 3 days, with duration of use averaging 3.9 days. Five patients discontinued therapy due to bleeding. Mortality rate was 57%, all secondary to multiorgan failure. In 3 surviving patients, 4 of 5 treated limbs resulted in at minimum partial amputation. Vasoactive-inotropic score tended higher prior to leech application, suggesting a vasoconstrictive pathway for arterial malperfusion. No identifiable trends appeared associated with salvaged limb or adverse effects. Blood loss predictably increased with leech application, as did total transfusion requirement. CONCLUSION: This case series establishes baseline data for use of hirudotherapy in critically ill children with acute limb ischemia caused by arterial malperfusion. Based on this retrospective cohort, we cannot recommend routine use of hirudotherapy for acute limb ischemia from arterial malperfusion in the pediatric intensive care unit. Application of leeches should be aligned with a protocol defining start and stop parameters, standardized leech utilization, and monitoring for adverse outcomes. Future study would benefit from consensus definitions of study outcomes, including perfusion recovery, tissue/limb salvage and bleeding manifestations. Additional prospective studies are needed prior to any standard or systematic recommendations for use. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9849792/ /pubmed/36683785 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.1011171 Text en © 2023 Resch, Hedstrom, Steiner, Said and Somani. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pediatrics
Resch, Joseph C.
Hedstrom, Rachel
Steiner, Marie E.
Said, Sameh M.
Somani, Arif
Hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: A retrospective observational cohort
title Hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: A retrospective observational cohort
title_full Hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: A retrospective observational cohort
title_fullStr Hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: A retrospective observational cohort
title_full_unstemmed Hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: A retrospective observational cohort
title_short Hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: A retrospective observational cohort
title_sort hirudotherapy for limb ischemia in the pediatric intensive care unit: a retrospective observational cohort
topic Pediatrics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9849792/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36683785
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.1011171
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