Submitted by harkhinz t3_yn6uev in askscience
Thedurtysanchez t1_iv9ygep wrote
Reply to comment by rharvey8090 in During heart transplanting, how does the body survive before the heart is replaced? by harkhinz
Our son was at risk of needing ECMO and the main risk we heard at the time was a poor understanding of the temperature fluctuations in the blood supply could lead to cognitive or behavior complications later in life. Have you experienced that at all?
rharvey8090 t1_iv9zjll wrote
To be totally honest, I have pretty much zero experience with pediatric ECMO usage, just adults. In our adult patients, we have a controlled temp water bath connected to the circuit for temperature maintenance.
Thedurtysanchez t1_iva09l4 wrote
I believe they do it for the newborns as well, but the variations may have been enough.
He was on bypass for his surgeries and even that lead the surgeons to let us know he is at higher risk for ADHD for some reason they don't fully understand.
[deleted] t1_iva30yi wrote
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k9moonmoon t1_ivbgz4y wrote
I wonder if there's a physical causation or if it's just, kids that go through something like that are being closely monitored by parents as they grow and so symptoms for ADHD that might otherwise be overlooked get caught more? How common is an increase in ADHD in similarly expansive interventions in other kids? But bodies are so weird, it being a physical impact that will one day be understood exactly how it works, I'd believe.
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