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Minn. hospital Air ECMO flies cardiologist and pump to rural cardiac patients

Paramedics in north-central Minnesota can now activate a first-in-the-nation air ECMO team, helicoptering a cardiologist and device from M Health Fairview Northland in Princeton

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The first-ever helicopter-supported ECMO program in the U.S. launched this week at M Health Fairview Northland Medical Center, giving more rural Minnesotans a fighting chance against cardiac arrest.

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By Jeremy Olson
Star Tribune

PRINCETON, Minn. 鈥 M Health Fairview has expanded its emergency life-support program for cardiac arrests, flying a cardiologist and an artificial heart pump to north-central Minnesota when patients鈥 hearts have stopped.

Statistics show that most people who experience cardiac arrest outside a hospital don鈥檛 survive. But starting this month, paramedics have been instructed to call for the emergency life support if they can transport patients to M Health Fairview Northland Medical Center in Princeton, Minn., within 30 minutes of sudden cardiac arrest.

| MORE: ECMO in EMS: Pitfalls and possibilities

The life support is called ECMO, or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, which mechanically circulates the blood, buying time for patients鈥 defective hearts and lungs to heal.

The first-in-the-nation air ECMO program brings the cardiac technology to a region surrounding Princeton that hasn鈥檛 had access in the past 鈥 spanning east to the Wisconsin border and north to Mille Lacs. Cardiac arrests are rare enough in that rural region to make it wasteful to base a specially trained cardiologist and ECMO machine at Northland, but a helicopter from the University of Minnesota Medical Center in Minneapolis can get them to the hospital in time, said Dr. Jason Bartos, an interventional cardiologist and leader of the program.

鈥淥ur goal is to have everybody on-pump within an hour,鈥 said Bartos, who at the outset is the only cardiologist flying to emergencies in Princeton. 鈥淚f we get patients on-pump within 30 minutes of their call to 911, we still have nearly 100% survival, but with every minute that goes by, it鈥檚 an extra 2.5% [chance of] mortality.鈥

Rapid response is crucial because cardiac arrest halts blood flow to the brain and organs. Cardiac arrests can be triggered by traumatic injuries, drug overdoses, irregular heartbeats and by heart attacks 鈥 blood vessel blockages that decrease or cut off blood flow.

An ECMO device pumps blood outside the body, where it is reoxygenated and warmed before being pumped back in. Mobile ECMO was unthinkable two decades ago, because the original pumps were larger than pianos and fixed in surgical suites.

Smaller versions allowed M Health Fairview to and pack ECMO pumps in SUVs that could be rushed to Twin Cities hospitals where patients in cardiac arrest needed them. Ground-based ECMO teams have been dispatched roughly 700 times so far.

The U even created a super ambulance with its own procedural suite in the back, designed to meet paramedics in remote locations such as parking lots and provide ECMO before sending patients to hospitals.

That vision created licensing and logistical concerns, though. So instead, the ambulance dispatches from a fire station in Edina to Southdale Hospital or to North Memorial Health in Robbinsdale when needed. The approach still shaves minutes off ECMO time compared to wheeling the patients into hospitals first.

Eligible patients have a 40% better chance at survival if they receive ECMO from one of the mobile teams, Bartos said.

The air ECMO program has been active for two weeks but has yet to respond to a call in Princeton. M Health Fairview is nonetheless looking to expand the program to Lakes Medical Center in Wyoming, Minn., which would provide ECMO access to more remote areas in Minnesota and western Wisconsin. The air medical transport service provides the helicopters and emergency transport for the program.

Northland ER nurse manager Jason White said he leapt at the opportunity to bring the program to his community. ER workers are trained to prepare patients so they can be immediately tethered to ECMO when the helicopter arrives.

鈥淚f this offers us one more way to save lives, let鈥檚 do it, you know?鈥 he said.

The option is only available for adults in cardiac arrest who show signs that their hearts can be shocked back into rhythm with defibrillators once the underlying blockages or defects in their hearts or blood vessels are fixed. Medics also must provide CPR continuously to keep blood flowing until the patients are placed on the pumps.

An annual CARES registry tracked outcomes of 3,478 sudden cardiac arrests that occurred outside hospitals in Minnesota last year, including some cases that received ECMO or would have benefited from it had it been available. Only about 12% survived and recovered to the point they could be discharged from hospital care, underscoring the need for more treatment options, according to the , released in late July.

Sending an ECMO team by helicopter while a patient is en route to Princeton is usually faster than sending a helicopter to Princeton and bringing the patient back to Minneapolis, he added. The ECMO team is only dispatched when cardiac arrests have been witnessed, which provides an accurate timeframe to suggest whether lifesaving efforts are possible.

EMS agencies in England and the Netherlands have used similar approaches, and medical helicopters have flown U.S. patients in cardiac arrest to hospitals equipped with ECMO. But Bartos said this program 鈥渋s breaking new ground in the United States鈥 by flying ECMO technology to remote hospital locations.

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鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of debate internationally about how much effort is too much, how much expense is too much, and fundamentally those conversations come down to how much it鈥檚 worth to put in to save a life,鈥 Bartos said. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 a value judgment that everybody has different answers to. Personally, I find it very rewarding to do the work that we鈥檝e done here.鈥

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