Literature DB >> 12204734

Six-year prospective audit of chest reopening after cardiac arrest.

J H Mackay1, S J Powell, J Osgathorp, C J Rozario.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify which patients benefit from chest reopening after cardiac arrest.
SETTING: Cardio-thoracic hospital undertaking full range of adult cardio-thoracic surgery.
METHODS: In-hospital arrests were prospectively audited over a 6-year period. Information was collected for every patient whose chest was reopened following cardiac arrest: location of arrest, type of arrest, specialty, time since surgery, time to chest reopening, location of chest opening, surgical findings on reopening, time to cardiopulmonary bypass (if used) and patient outcomes. EXCLUSIONS: Arrests in theatre and chest openings for reasons other than cardiac arrest.
RESULTS: There were 818 confirmed in-hospital arrests following 'cardiac arrest calls'. Chest reopening was undertaken in 79 surgical patients. Overall survival to discharge was 20/79 (25%). Favourable determinants of outcome were: arrest on intensive care unit (ICU), arrest within 24 h of surgery and reopening within 10 min of arrest. Nineteen of 58 (33%) chest openings following arrests on the ICU survived to discharge compared to one of 21 (5%) patients whose initial arrest was outside the ICU (P=0.017). One of nine ward arrests scooped to ICU for chest reopening survived whereas all 12 patients reopened on the ward died. Fifteen of 40 patients (38%) reopened within 24 h surgery survived compared to five of 39 patients where reopening was undertaken more than 24 h after surgery (P=0.02). Fourteen of 29 (48%) patients opened within 10 min of arrest survived to discharge compared to six of 50 (12%) patients where time to reopening was more than 10 min (P=<0.001). Seven of 22 patients (32%) patients where emergency bypass was utilised survived to discharge.
CONCLUSION: This study strongly confirms the benefit of chest reopening after cardiac arrest in the cardiac surgical ICU. Patients who arrest within 24 h of surgery and in whom reopening is instituted within 10 min are particularly likely to benefit. The value of chest reopening in arrests outside the ICU remains unresolved. All patients reopened on the ward died, suggesting that this practice should be discontinued. Early 'scoop and run' resulted in one solitary survivor though it should probably be restricted to patients who arrest within 72 h of surgery as surgically remediable problems are unlikely after this time.

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Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12204734     DOI: 10.1016/s1010-7940(02)00294-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Cardiothorac Surg        ISSN: 1010-7940            Impact factor:   4.191


  7 in total

Review 1.  Management of cardiac arrest following cardiac surgery.

Authors:  J Brand; A McDonald; J Dunning
Journal:  BJA Educ       Date:  2017-11-21

2.  Six-year prospective audit of 'scoop and run' for chest-reopening after cardiac arrest in a cardiac surgical ward setting.

Authors:  Nicholas J Lees; Sarah J Powell; Jonathan H Mackay
Journal:  Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg       Date:  2012-08-09

3.  Postoperative cardiac arrest after heart surgery: does extracorporeal perfusion support a paradigm change in management?

Authors:  Edward Gologorsky; Francisco Igor B Macedo; Enisa M Carvalho; Angela Gologorsky; Marco Ricci; Tomas A Salerno
Journal:  Anesthesiol Res Pract       Date:  2010-06-03

4.  Perioperative dexmedetomidine improves mortality in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery.

Authors:  Fuhai Ji; Zhongmin Li; Nilas Young; Peter Moore; Hong Liu
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth       Date:  2013-10-29       Impact factor: 2.628

5.  Presence of chest tubes does not affect the hemodynamic efficacy of standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

Authors:  Gu Hyun Kang; Hyun Youk; Kyoung Chul Cha; Yoonsuk Lee; Hyung Il Kim; Yong Sung Cha; Oh Hyun Kim; Hyun Kim; Kang Hyun Lee; Sung Oh Hwang
Journal:  J Intensive Care       Date:  2017-12-21

6.  Logistic early warning scores to predict death, cardiac arrest or unplanned intensive care unit re-admission after cardiac surgery.

Authors:  Y-D Chiu; S S Villar; J W Brand; M V Patteril; D J Morrice; J Clayton; J H Mackay
Journal:  Anaesthesia       Date:  2019-07-03       Impact factor: 6.955

Review 7.  [Cardiac arrest under special circumstances].

Authors:  Carsten Lott; Anatolij Truhlář; Anette Alfonzo; Alessandro Barelli; Violeta González-Salvado; Jochen Hinkelbein; Jerry P Nolan; Peter Paal; Gavin D Perkins; Karl-Christian Thies; Joyce Yeung; David A Zideman; Jasmeet Soar
Journal:  Notf Rett Med       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 0.826

  7 in total

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