Aurélien Roumy
University of Lausanne
6 Papers
6 Citations
Aurélien Roumy is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Neurological Pupil index for Early Prognostication After Venoarterial Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation
John-Paul Miroz,Nawfel Ben-Hamouda,Adriano Bernini,Federico Romagnosi,Filippo Bongiovanni,Aurélien Roumy,Matthias Kirsch,Lucas Liaudet,Philippe Eckert,Mauro Oddo +9 more
TL;DR: Quantitative NPi alone had excellent ability to predict a poor outcome from day 1 after VA-ECMO insertion, with no false positives, and combining NPi and 12-h PREDICT-VA ECMO score increased sensitivity of outcome prediction, while maintaining 100% specificity.
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Aortic valve lesion after coronary angiography.
TL;DR: A 56-year-old patient admitted to hospital for the suspicion of an acute coronary syndrome underwent coronary angiography without detection of significant lesions and seven days later the echocardiography showed acute severe aortic valve insufficiency.
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Intravenous zanamivir for influenza myocarditis and enteral malabsorption.
TL;DR: In these two patients with influenza myocarditis and refractory cardiogenic shock, the rapid identification of poor drug absorption using a simple paracetamol absorption test allowed the early introduction of parenteral zanamivir instead of oral oseltamivIR, with excellent clinical outcomes.
Simple equations to predict the effects of veno-venous ECMO in decompensated Eisenmenger syndrome.
Jean Bonnemain,Denise Auberson,Tobias Rutz,Patrick Yerly,John-David Aubert,Aurélien Roumy,Olivier Pantet,Marco Rusca,Lucas Liaudet,Lise Piquilloud +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a series of equations to accurately predict the effects of VV-ECMO on arterial oxygenation in Eisenmenger syndrome and illustrate this point by a case of ES decompensation with refractory hypoxaemia consecutive to an acute respiratory failure due to viral pneumonia.
Hyperoxia during extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation for refractory cardiac arrest is associated with severe circulatory failure and increased mortality.
Jean Bonnemain,Marco Rusca,Zied Ltaief,Aurélien Roumy,Piergiorgio Tozzi,Mauro Oddo,Matthias Kirsch,Lucas Liaudet +7 more
TL;DR: Hyperoxia is associated with increased mortality during ECPR, possibly by promoting circulatory collapse or delayed neurological damage.