| Literature DB >> 21822471 |
Maulik P Shah1, Leslie Zimmerman, Jean Bullard, Midori A Yenari.
Abstract
At laboratory and clinical levels, therapeutic hypothermia has been shown to improve neurologic outcomes and mortality following cardiac arrest. We reviewed each cardiac arrest in our community-based Veterans Affairs Medical Center over a three-year period. The majority of cases were in-hospital arrests associated with initial pulseless electrical activity or asystole. Of a total of 100 patients suffering 118 cardiac arrests, 29 arrests involved comatose survivors, with eight patients completing therapeutic cooling. Cerebral performance category scores at discharge and six months were significantly better in the cooled cohort versus the noncooled cohort, and, in every case except for one, cooling was offered for appropriate reasons. Mean time to initiation of cooling protocol was 3.7 hours and mean time to goal temperature of 33°C was 8.8 hours, and few complications clearly related to cooling were noted in our case series. While in-patient hospital mortality of cardiac arrest was high at 65% mortality during hospital admission, therapeutic hypothermia was safe and feasible at our center. Our cooling times and incidence of favorable outcomes are comparable to previously published reports. This study demonstrates the feasibility of implementing, a cooling protocol a community setting, and the role of neurologists in ensuring effective hospital-wide implementation.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21822471 PMCID: PMC3140133 DOI: 10.4061/2011/791639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke Res Treat
Figure 1“Code Blue” Alerts at San Francisco VA Medical Center from November 2007 to August 2010. The diagram breaks down the numbers and types of “Code Blue” arrests including brief categorization of reasons of why patients who were comatose after cardiac arrest were not cooled or why cooling was stopped after initiation.
Characteristics of cardiac arrests in which patient survived.
| Not in coma after arrest ( | In coma after arrest, not cooled ( | In coma after arrest, cooling started ( | Statistical test for significance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 40 (95) | 17 (100) | 10 (91) | |
| Age, in yrs | 70.4 ± 11.1 | 72.4 ± 12.4 | 69.5 ± 13.0 | |
| In-hospital Arrest | 47 (92) | 16 (94) | 11 (100) | |
| Initial cardiac rhythm | ||||
| PEA/asystole | 47 (92) | 18 (100) | 10 (91) | |
| VTach/VFib | 4 (8) | 0 (0) | 1 (9) | |
| ROSC in minutes | 5.2 ± 4.6 range (0.1–20)a | 33.5 ± 21.2 range (5–60)b | 21.9 ± 11.9 range (5–35)c | |
| Mechanism of arrest | ||||
| 1° Cardiac | 24 (47) | 4 (22) | 2 (18) | |
| 1° Pulmonary | 13 (25) | 8 (44) | 3 (27) | |
| 1° Gastrointestinal | 1 (2) | 2 (11) | 1 (9) | |
| Sepsis/infection | 5 (10) | 2 (11) | 0 (0) | |
| Intraoperative | 2 (4) | 2 (11) | 0 (0) | |
| Unknown/other | 6 (12) | 0 (0) | 5 (45) | |
| Comorbidities | ||||
| CAD or CHF | 24 (57) | 9 (53) | 7 (64) | |
| Vascular RFs | 26 (62) | 13 (76) | 6 (55) | |
| Cancer | 8 (19) | 5 (29) | 3 (27) | |
| Pulmonary disease | 8 (19) | 3 (18) | 1 (9) | |
| GI/liver | 5 (12) | 2 (12) | 1 (9) | |
| ESRD | 6 (14) | 3 (18) | 0 (0) | |
| HIV, hepatitis | 3 (7) | 1 (6) | 0 (0) | |
| Substance abused | 3 (7) | 1 (6) | 2 (18) | |
| Expired before discharge | 13 (31) | 16 (94) | 6 (55) | |
| CPC at discharge | ||||
| Favorable (1-2) | 27 (64) | 1 (6) | 5 (45) | |
| Unfavorable (3–5) | 15 (36) | 16 (94) | 6 (55) | |
| CPC at 6 Months | ||||
| Favorable (1-2) | 19 (45) | 0 (0) | 3 (27) | |
| Unfavorable (3–5) | 23 (55) | 17 (100) | 8 (73) |
Values as whole number and (percentage), except in case of continuous variable, given as mean ± standard deviation.
ROSC: return of spontaneous circulation; 1°: primary; VTach, ventricular tachycardia; VFib: ventricular fibrillation; vascular RFs: cardiovascular risk factors.
Values as whole number and (percentage), except in case of continuous variable, given as mean ± standard deviation.
aData available for 34 of 51 arrests; bavailable for 10 of 18 arrests; cavailable for 8 of 11 arrests; dsubstance abuse includes alcohol abuse; eFisher's exact test; fanalysis of variance (ANOVA).
Comatose survivors of cardiac arrest that were treated with therapeutic hypothermia.
| Patient no. | Date of arrest | Age | Mechanism of arrest | Duration pulseless | Time to initiation | Time to 33°C | Time cooled | Lowest temp. | Rewarming time | Comments/CPC at discharge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 11/22/2007 | 55 | Suicide attempt, hanging | 35 mins | 3.5 hrs | 11 hrs | 24 hrs | N/A | 16 hrs | At 72 hrs, intact brainstem reflexes but persistent coma, care withdrawn (CPC 5) |
| 2 | 1/26/2008 | 83 | Unknown | 20 mins | — | — | — | — | — | Cooling stopped when goals of care changed after family arrived; died next day (CPC 5) |
| 3 | 5/2/2008 | 59 | Variceal bleeding, aspiration | 20 mins | — | — | — | — | — | Cooling stopped due to coagulopathy and severe GI bleeding; died next day (CPC 5) |
| 4 | 5/27/2008 | 85 | Aspiration | 30 mins | 6 hrs | 9 hrs | 24 hrs | 32.1 | 12 hrs | Neurology called late due to concern for coagulopathy; persistent coma at 72 hrs; care withdrawn a week later (CPC 5) |
| 5 | 7/27/2008 | 83 | Cardiac Arrhythmia | 35 mins | 2 hrs | 6 hrs | 23 hrs | 31.3 | 24 hrs | Discharged to rehab unit with short-term memory deficits, required assistance with walking (CPC 2); later diagnosed with gastric cancer, deceased 8 months later |
| 6 | 8/20/2008 | 61 | Pericardial tamponade | N/A | 4 hrs | 9 hrs | 24 hrs | 32.4 | 9 hrs | Initially treated in OR for tamponade; at 72 hrs in persistent coma with myoclonic status epilepticus; ethics consult called and care withdrawn (CPC 5) |
| 7 | 2/21/2009 | 57 | Hyperkalemia, postextubation | N/A | 4 hrs | 6 hrs | 22 hrs | 33.0 | 10 hrs | At 72 hr exam, neurologically normal examination; discharged to rehab. unit, still alive and neurologically intact (CPC 1) |
| 8 | 2/24/2009 | 85 | Possible vagal hyperactivity | 5 mins | 2.5 hrs | 3 hrs | 24 hrs | 32.3 | 14 hrs | At 72 hrs, awake and alert, neurologically intact aside from mild confusion (CPC 2); had another arrest 3 weeks later and died |
| 9 | 5/29/2009 | 59 | Pulmonary embolus, sepsis | 5 mins | 0.5 hrs | 4 hrs | 5 hrs | N/A | — | Cooling stopped due to persistent hypotension and multiorgan failure; deceased two days later (CPC 5) |
| 10 | 2/20/2010 | 78 | COPD, aspiration | N/A | 5 hrs | 9 hrs | 24 hrs | 30.5 | 22 hrs | At 96 hrs, alert, briskly following commands; remained ventilator dependent, transferred to rehab. unit (CPC 2); died 6 months later |
| 11 | 8/10/2010 | 59 | Unknown | 25 mins | 2.5 hrs | 17 hrs | 24 hrs | 32.0 | 4 hrs | Myoclonus while cooled; rewarming occurred quickly and febrile afterwards; despite normal neuroexamination at 72 hrs; discharged to home, still alive (CPC 1) |