| Literature DB >> 26380990 |
Peter J Kudenchuk1, Claudio Sandroni2, Hendrik R Drinhaus3, Bernd W Böttiger4, Alain Cariou5,6, Kjetil Sunde7, Martin Dworschak8, Fabio Silvio Taccone9, Nicolas Deye10, Hans Friberg11, Steven Laureys12, Didier Ledoux13, Mauro Oddo14, Stéphane Legriel15, Philippe Hantson16, Jean-Luc Diehl17, Pierre-Francois Laterre18.
Abstract
Jean-Luc Diehl The French Intensive Care Society organized on 5th and 6th June 2014 its 4th "Paris International Conference in Intensive Care", whose principle is to bring together the best international experts on a hot topic in critical care medicine. The 2014 theme was "Breakthrough in cardiac arrest", with many high-quality updates on epidemiology, public health data, pre-hospital and in-ICU cares. The present review includes short summaries of the major presentations, classified into six main chapters: Epidemiology of CA Pre-hospital management Post-resuscitation management: targeted temperature management Post-resuscitation management: optimizing organ perfusion and metabolic parameters Neurological assessment of brain damages Public healthcare.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; Cardio-pulmonary resuscitation; Minimally conscious state; Organ donation; Persistent vegetative state; Targeted temperature management; Therapeutic hypothermia
Year: 2015 PMID: 26380990 PMCID: PMC4573754 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-015-0064-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Fig. 1Survival to hospital discharge from out-of-hospital ventricular fibrillation in various communities outside the United States
Fig. 2The impact of instituting high-performance CPR in King County, Washington, in 2005 on survival from witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation
Fig. 3The 25-year trend of rates of survival to discharge after resuscitation from in-hospital cardiac arrest in 100 observational studies, 1985–2010
Fig. 4Algorithm for early imaging diagnosis after cardiac arrest
Fig. 5Therapeutic hypothermia side-effects and their categorization
Fig. 6Mean bladder temperature in the 33 and 36 °C intervention groups of the Target Temperature Management after Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest Trial (TTM-trial), during the 36 h of temperature intervention. Temperature values are presented with 95 % confidence intervals. In the original publication, temperature curves displayed the means ± 2SD. From Wise MP et al. [179]. Reprinted with permission
Fig. 7The TTM-trial included and randomized 950 comatose patients to either 33 or 36 °C. Probability of survival through the end of the trial and the number of patients at risk at each time point is presented. From Nielsen et al. [86]. Copyright © (2013) Massachusetts Medical Society. Reprinted with permission
Fig. 8Timeline of events that may occur after anoxic coma
Fig. 9A simplified electroencephalogram (EEG) with two original EEG curves (lower panel), in combination with an amplitude integrated EEG (aEEG) trend curve (upper panel). Four dominating EEG patterns after cardiac arrest are shown: a flat, b suppression-burst, c continuous and d electrographic status epilepticus. From Friberg et al. [161]. Reprinted with permission
Fig. 10Assessment of health condition in the long-term follow-up after cardiac arrest (adapted from World Health Organization [171])