Combined intra- and post-cardiac arrest hypothermic-targeted temperature management in a rat model of asphyxial cardiac arrest improves survival and neurologic outcome compared to either strategy alone

Resuscitation ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 107 ◽  
pp. 94-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taeyun Kim ◽  
Michael G. Paine ◽  
He Meng ◽  
Ren Xiaodan ◽  
Jacob Cohen ◽  
...  
Circulation ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 140 (Suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Bernett ◽  
Robert A Swor

Introduction: Head computed tomography (HCT) is often performed to assess for hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in resuscitated out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients. Our primary objective was to assess whether cerebral edema (CE) on early HCT is associated with poor survival and neurologic outcome post OHCA. Methods: We included subjects from a prospectively collected cardiac arrest database of OHCA adult patients who received targeted temperature management (TTM) at two academic suburban hospitals from 2009-Sept-2018. Cases were included if a HCT was performed in the emergency department (ED). Patient demographics and cardiac arrest variables were collected. HCT results were abstracted by study authors from radiology reports. HCT findings were categorized as no acute disease, evidence of CE, or excluded (bleed, tumor, stroke). Outcomes were survival to discharge or cerebral performance scores (CPC) at discharge of three or four (poor neurologic outcome). Descriptive statistics, univariate, multivariate, survival, and interrater reliability analysis were performed. Results: During the study period, there were 425 OHCA, 277 cases had ED HCTs performed; 254 cases were included in the final survival analysis. Patients were predominately male, 189 (65.0%), average age 60.9 years, average BMI of 30.5. Of all cases, 44 (15.9%) showed CE on CT. Univariate analysis demonstrated that CE was associated with 9.2-fold greater odds of poor outcome (OR: 9.23; 95% CI 1.73, 49.2), and 9.1-fold greater odds of death (OR: 9.09: 95% CI 2.4 33.9). In adjusted analysis, CE was associated with 14.9-fold greater odds of poor CPC outcome (AOR: 14.9, 95% CI, 2.49, 88.4), and 13.7-fold greater odds of death (AOR: 13.7, 95% CI, 3.26, 57.4). Adjusted survival analysis demonstrated that patients with CE on HCT had 3.6-fold greater hazard of death than those without CE (HR: 3.56: 95% CI 2.34, 5.41). Interrater reliability demonstrated excellent agreement between reviewers for CE on HCT (κ = 0.86). Conclusion: The results identify that abnormal HCTs early in the post-arrest period in OHCA patients are associated with poor rates of survival and neurologic outcome. Prospective work is needed to confirm whether selection bias or other variables confound this association.


Circulation ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 132 (suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian R Drennan ◽  
Steve Lin ◽  
Kevin E Thorpe ◽  
Jason E Buick ◽  
Sheldon Cheskes ◽  
...  

Introduction: Targeted temperature management (TTM) reduces neurologic injury from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). As the risk of neurologic injury increases with prolonged cardiac arrests, the benefit of TTM may depend upon cardiac arrest duration. We hypothesized that there is a time-dependent effect of TTM on neurologic outcomes from OHCA. Methods: Retrospective, observational study of the Toronto RescuNET Epistry-Cardiac Arrest database from 2007 to 2014. We included adult (>18) OHCA of presumed cardiac etiology that remained comatose (GCS<10) after a return of spontaneous circulation. We used multivariable logistic regression to determine the effect of TTM and the duration of cardiac arrest on good neurologic outcome (Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) 0-3) and survival to hospital discharge while controlling for other known predictors. Results: There were 1496 patients who met our inclusion criteria, of whom 981 (66%) received TTM. Of the patients who received TTM, 59% had a good neurologic outcome compared to 39% of patients who did not receive TTM (p< 0.001). After adjusting for the Utstein variables, use of TTM was associated with improved neurologic outcome (OR 1.60, 95% CI 1.10-2.32; p = 0.01) but not with survival to discharge (OR 1.23, 95% CI 0.90-1.67; p = 0.19). The impact of TTM on neurologic outcome was dependent on the duration of cardiac arrest (p<0.05) (Fig 1). Other significant predictors of good neurologic outcome were younger age, public location, initial shockable rhythm, and shorter duration of cardiac arrest (all p values < 0.05). A subgroup analysis found the use of TTM to be associated with neurologic outcome in both shockable (p = 0.01) and non-shockable rhythms (p = 0.04) but was not associated with survival to discharge in either group (p = 0.12 and p = 0.14 respectively). Conclusion: The use of TTM was associated with improved neurologic outcome at hospital discharge. Patients with prolonged durations of cardiac arrest benefited more from TTM.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Min-Jeong Lee ◽  
Minjung Kathy Chae

Abstract Background and Aims Therapeutic hypothermia or targeted temperature management (TTM) has been standard treatment for cardiac arrest survivors with suspected hypoxic ischemic brain injury for improvement in both survival and neurological outcomes. TTM is consisted of an induction phase of quickly lowering the temperature to target temperature (ranging from 32°C -36°C) as soon as possible, a hypothermia maintenance phase of keeping the body temperature at target temperature for at least 24 hours, a rewarming phase of slowly rewarming the temperature to normothermia, and a normothermia phase of keeping the body temperature at normothermia. During the dynamic changes in body temperature, cold-diuresis is a commonly described phenomenon. However, limited studies have characterized cold-induced diuresis during TTM. In this study, we sought to determine urine output changes during post cardiac arrest therapeutic hypothermia. Method This retrospective cohort study included adult patients who underwent TTM after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and were admitted to the intensive care unit for post cardiac arrest care between January 2012 and August 2018. The exclusion criteria of this study were as follows: 1) deceased status before the completion of all phase of TTM; 2) previous end stage kidney disease patients, 3) undergoing renal replacement therapy due to AKI within 48 hours of TTM termination; 4) terminal cancer less than 6 months of life expectancy or previously cerebral performance category (CPC) 3 or more. The neurologic outcome was assessed using the CPC score after 1 month. Good neurologic outcome was defined as a CPC score of 1, 2 and poor neurologic outcome as a CPC score of 3 to 5. The post cardiac arrest protocol recommends a target temperature of 33°C unless the patient is hemodynamically unstable or has a bleeding tendency or severe infection. Rewarming rate was 0.15°C/hr or 0.25°C/hr. TTM was conducted with the use of temperature managing devices with a feedback loop system (Artic Sun Energy Transfer Pads, Medivance Corp., Louisville, CO, USA; Cool Guard Alsius Icy Heat Exchange Catheter, Alsius Corporation, Irvine, CA, USA). We calculated the hourly IV fluid input and urine output rates for each TTM phase. To compare the mean of urine volume between each TTM phase, we used repeated measure analysis of variance (ANOVA). Results 178 Patients included in the analysis. We observed a increase in urine output rates during hypothermia induction. This effect persisted even after adjustment for variable clinical confounders, including intravenous fluid input rate, mean arterial pressure (MAP), initial shockable rhythm, SOFA score, body mass index, and IV furosemide use. However, we did not detect any evidence of urine output increases or decreases during the hypothermia maintenance or rewarming phases. By repeating measures ANOVA and a linear mixed model, it was confirmed that there is a difference in urine output for each TTM phase. Even after the post hoc analysis was calibrated with several variables, only the hypotheria induction phase differed significantly from the urine output of the phase. Conclusion Although our results are some limitations, the findings support the potential presence of cold-induced dieresis, but not rewarm anti-diuresis during TTM. Our study may not fully capture the extent of renal impairment in post cardiac arrest undergoing TTM. However, our objective was to characterize urine output during TTM in post cardiac arrest patients. This has important implications for fluid management in patients undergoing TTM.


Circulation ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 140 (Suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyun Soo Kim ◽  
Kyu Nam Park ◽  
Soo Hyun Kim ◽  
Sang Hoon Oh ◽  
Chun Song Youn

Introduction: Despite recent advances in critical care, out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients still have a low probability of survival. For the purpose of an objective assessment of a patient’s risk of death or neurological deficits, several clinical tools have recently been developed. Hypothesis: The first hypothesis is that OHCA and C-GRApH score could predict neurologic outcome after OHCA patients treated with targeted temperature management (TTM). The second hypothesis is that adding neurologic examination to those scores could further improve outcome prediction after OHCA. Methods: This retrospective study included OHCA patients treated with TTM from 2009 to 2017 in a tertiary teaching hospital in Seoul, Korea. We calculated two cardiac arrest specific risk scores (OHCA and C-GRApH) at the time of admission. Initial neurologic examination (Full Outline of UnResponsiveness Brainstem reflexes (FOUR_B) score and Glasgow Coma Scale motor score (GCS_M)) was also evaluated. The primary outcome was neurological outcome at 6 months after CA. Results: Of 311 subjects, 100 (32.2%) had a good neurologic outcome at 6 months after CA. OHCA score had AUC of 0.843 (95% CI 0.797 - 0.888) and C-GRApH score had AUC of 0.774 (95% CI 0.717 - 0.830). Addition of FOUR_B or GCS_M to OHCA score improved prediction of poor neurologic outcome (AUC 0.891, p = 0.001 for FOUR_B and AUC 0.878, p=0.004 for GCS_M). Results were similar for C-GRApH score to predict poor neurologic outcome. Conclusions: This study confirms the good prognostic performance of cardiac arrest specific scores to predict neurological outcomes in OHCA patients treated with TTM. Addition of neurologic examination variables further improved prognostication for neurologic outcome.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youn-Jung Kim ◽  
Min-jee Kim ◽  
Yong Seo Koo ◽  
Won Young Kim

Abstract Background Electroencephalography is a widely used tool for detecting epileptiform and assessing neurological outcomes after cardiac arrest. We investigated the prognostic value of standard electroencephalography during early post-cardiac arrest period and evaluated the performance of electroencephalography findings combined with other clinical features for predicting good outcome. Methods This observational registry-based study was conducted at tertiary care hospital in Korea. Data of all consecutive adult comatose out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survivors who underwent electroencephalography during targeted temperature management between 2010 and 2018 were extracted. Electroencephalography findings, classified according to the American Clinical Neurophysiological Society critical care electroencephalography terminology, and good neurologic outcome-related clinical features were identified via multivariable logistic analysis. Results Good outcomes were observed in 36.5% of 170 patients. Median electroencephalography time was 22.0 hours. Electroencephalography background, voltage and other findings (burst suppression, reactivity to pain stimuli) significantly differed between good and poor outcome groups. Electroencephalography background with dominant alpha and theta waves had the highest odds ratio of 9.8 (95% confidence interval 3.9-24.9) in multivariable logistic analysis. Electroencephalography background frequency enabled identification of a good neurologic outcome (sensitivity, 83.87%; specificity, 75.93%). Combination of other clinical features (age<65 years, initial shockable rhythm, resuscitation duration<20 min) with electroencephalography findings increased predictive performance for good neurologic outcomes (sensitivity, 95.2%; specificity, 100%). ConclusionsBackground frequency patterns of standard electroencephalography during targeted temperature management may play a role as an early prognostic tool in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients.


2014 ◽  
Vol 42 (8) ◽  
pp. 1919-1930 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eyal Golan ◽  
Kali Barrett ◽  
Aziz S. Alali ◽  
Abhijit Duggal ◽  
Draga Jichici ◽  
...  

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