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Pumpless arterio-venous extracorporeal lung assist compared with veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation during experimental lung injury R. Kopp, R. Bensberg, M. Wardeh, R. Rossaint, R. Kuhlen, D. Henzler British Journal of Anaesthesia Volume 108, Issue 5, Pages (May 2012) DOI: /bja/aes021 Copyright © 2012 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions
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Fig 1 Photograph of mECMO (left) and pECLA (right). For veno-venous ECMO, circuit blood inflow was from the femoral vein (1) and return to the jugular vein (2) after passing blood pump (4) and oxygenator (5). In pumpless ECLA, blood from the femoral artery (3) flowed through the oxygenator (5) back into the femoral vein (1). Arterial (6) and right heart catheters (7) were placed in the contralateral femoral artery and vein, respectively. British Journal of Anaesthesia , DOI: ( /bja/aes021) Copyright © 2012 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions
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Fig 2 Extracorporeal oxygen uptake (left panel) and carbon dioxide transfer rate (right panel). Extracorporeal gas transfer of mECMO and pECLA is presented in per cent of total oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production. Data are displayed as mean and sd with n=8 for each group (P<0.05: * vs 1 h; # mECMO vs pECLA). British Journal of Anaesthesia , DOI: ( /bja/aes021) Copyright © 2012 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions
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