The ECMO machine pumps your blood through artificial lungs and lets your heart rest
If your heart is failing or you have recently undergone heart surgery, your heart may need time to rest or recover. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, or ECMO, pumps your blood through a machine so your heart doesn’t have to work as hard to deliver oxygen-rich blood to the rest of the body. We also may recommend this treatment to prepare your heart for an assist device, such as a left ventricular assist device (LVAD).
Our cardiac surgery program is one of the highest-volume cardiac surgery centers in the region. These surgeons’ experience helps them determine best practices to refine surgical techniques and improve patient care. Patients who need this treatment often are critically ill, and our surgeons work with other teams, such as palliative care or heart failure doctors, to treat their complex and unique conditions. We provide ECMO treatment options located in the Washington D.C., Baltimore, and Maryland areas.
What is ECMO?
ECMO is often used for patients who have already been admitted to the hospital. The procedure to connect the patient to the ECMO machine will be performed in the hospital room. The patient will be sedated and given medications to reduce pain and prevent blood clots.
The machine is connected to a patient using thin, flexible tubes called catheters that are inserted into an artery and a vein. If the patient is also placed on a ventilator to relieve stress on the lungs, they will be sedated and likely have a feeding tube inserted for nutrition.
Heart tests
Cardiac Catheterization
Cardiac catheterization is a minimally invasive way to diagnose and treat a variety of heart and vascular conditions by guiding thin, flexible tubes called catheters through blood vessels to problem areas.
Transesophageal Echocardiogram (TEE)
Transesophageal echocardiogram allows doctors to take very detailed images of the heart structure from a probe in the esophagus.
Our providers
Location: Change location Enter your location
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Kathleen C. Abalos, ANTH MD
Hospital Medicine
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Vera Woeli Adanuvor, MD
Hospital Medicine
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Rifqa K Alghareeb, MD
Hospital Medicine
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Fadi Alghzawi, MD
Hospital Medicine & Internal Medicine
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Sarah Rose DePalma, MSPAS PA
Hospital Medicine
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Angelita Estadilla, MD
Hospital Medicine
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Michael Bassam Ibrahim, MD
Cardiovascular Disease & Hospital Medicine
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Lauren Michaela Jewett, MMS PA
Critical Care Medicine
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Stephen Kendall Lee, AGACNP MSN
Critical Care Medicine
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Nimesh Satish Shah, BSCHEM MD
Cardiac Critical Care & Critical Care Medicine
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Elizabeth Sarah Shashaty, MD
Neonatology & Pediatrics
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Shannon Michelle Stegall, MD
Hospital Medicine
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Brooke Thornton, MMS PA
Critical Care Medicine
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Ilan Vavilin, MD
Internal Medicine
Not Accepting
New Patients Not Accepting New Patients -
Jessica Lynn Waters, MD MSPH
Emergency Medicine & Critical Care Medicine
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Yani Zhang, MD
Hospital Medicine
Our locations
Distance from Change locationEnter your location
MedStar Health: Cardiac Surgery at MedStar Washington Hospital Center
110 Irving Street, NW First Floor Washington, DC 20010
202-877-3503
MedStar Health: Cardiac Surgery at MedStar Union Memorial Hospital - Calvert Street Building
3300 North Calvert Street Calvert Street Building Second Floor, Suite A Baltimore, MD 21218
410-554-6534
Insurance
MedStar Health accepts most major health insurance plans. If you are uncertain as to whether your individual health insurance plan is accepted at MedStar Health, please call your insurance company.
