| Literature DB >> 26985247 |
Dimitrios Velissaris1, Vassilios Karamouzos1, Charalampos Pierrakos2, Ioanna Koniari3, Christina Apostolopoulou4, Menelaos Karanikolas5.
Abstract
The aim of the review was to summarize the literature over the last 25 years regarding bicarbonate administration in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. A PubMed search was conducted using the terms "bicarbonates" and "cardiac arrest", limited to human studies and reviews published in English (or at least with a meaningful abstract in English) in the last 25 years. Clinical and experimental data raised questions regarding the safety and effectiveness of sodium bicarbonate (SB) administration during cardiac arrest. Earlier advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) guidelines recommended routine bicarbonate administration as part of the ACLS algorithm, but recent guidelines no longer recommend its use. The debate in the literature is ongoing, but at the present time, SB administration is only recommended for cardiac arrest related to hypokalemia or overdose of tricyclic antidepressants. Several studies challenge the assumption that bicarbonate administration is beneficial for treatment of acidosis in cardiac arrest. At the present time, there is a trend against using bicarbonates in cardiac arrest, and this trend is supported by guidelines published by professional societies and organizations.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; Metabolic acidosis; Resuscitation; Sodium bicarbonate
Year: 2016 PMID: 26985247 PMCID: PMC4780490 DOI: 10.14740/jocmr2456w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med Res ISSN: 1918-3003
Clinical Studies Evaluating the Effect of Sodium Bicarbonate in Cardiac Arrest
| Author | Origin, year | Study design | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aufderheide et al [ | Wisconsin, USA, 1992 | Retrospective chart review, 619 arrest pts, 273 had ROSC | No association between SB and survival |
| Bar-Joseph et al [ | Pittsburgh, PA, USA, 2002 | Retrospective study, 2,915 pts from brain resuscitation clinical trial III dataset | SB given in 54% of cases, use increased with ACLS duration. SB should probably be given earlier. |
| Bar-Joseph et al [ | Pittsburgh, PA, USA, 2005 | Retrospective study, 2,122 pts from brain resuscitation clinical trial III dataset with ACLS lasting < 30 min | Earlier and more frequent use of SB associated with higher resuscitation rates and better long-term outcome |
| Bishop and Weisfeldt [ | Baltimore, MD, 1976 | Experimental data from seven dogs, clinical data from six cardiac arrest pts | SB increases PCO2, accentuates intracellular acidosis in poorly ventilated pts, may be useful in well-ventilated pts |
| Delooz and Lewi [ | Leuven, Belgium, 1989 | Retrospective data analysis | SB > 1 mEq/kg associated with poor outcome |
| Dybvik et al [ | Oslo, Norway, 1995 | RCT, SB (245 pts) vs. 0.9% NS (257 pts) | SB therapy had no effect on outcome |
| Geraci et al [ | Jacksonville, FL, USA, 2009 | Retrospective chart review, all CPR cases in 2005 - 2006, 88 pts received SB | SB linked with alkalemia in 16% of pts, recommendation for early collection of ABG sample |
| Mattar et al [ | Los Angeles, CA, USA, 1974 | Case series, 12 pts, SB in cardiac arrest | Plasma osmolality > 400 mOsm/kg, serum Na concentrations > 200 mEq/L |
| Roberts et al [ | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, 1990 | Retrospective study, 326 pts | Survival 4.2% (10/238) when SB given vs. 27.8% (20/72) when SB not given (P = 0.049) but SB use may reflect presence of severe acidosis |
| Stiell et al [ | Ottawa, ON, Canada, 1995 | Observational cohort study, 529 pts in 2 years received epi per ACLS guidelines | Logistic regression did not show association between SB and survival |
| Suljaga-Pechtel et al [ | New York, NY, USA, 1984 | Prospective observational study, 277 arrests in 226 pts | Survival lower in pts who needed SB, likely due to illness severity |
| van Walraven [ | Ottawa, ON, Canada, 1998 | Prospective cohort study, 773 pts with cardiac arrest, logistic regression for OR and 95% CI | 269 of 773 pts survived the first hour. SB use significantly associated with unsuccessful resuscitation |
| Vukmir and Katz [ | Pittsburgh, USA, 2006 | RCT, 792 patients, SB (420 pts) vs. placebo (372 pts) | Overall survival 13.9% (110/792), no difference between groups. Trend for improved survival with SB in prolonged (> 15 min) arrest |
| Weaver et al [ | Seattle, WA, USA, 1990 | RCT, lidocaine (n = 106) vs. epi (n = 93); historical controls (n = 132) for SB | Higher survival with SB infusion, which was done before the study started |
| Weil et al [ | Chicago, IL, USA, 1985 | Cohort study, 105 cardiac arrest pts, all received SB | Survival lower if pH > 7.55 within 10 min of CPR |
| Weng et al [ | Taiwan, 2013 | Retrospective cohort, 92 pts (30 with vs. 62 without SB) | SB did not improve rate of ROSC in prolonged (> 15 min) cardiac arrest |
ABG: arterial blood gas; ACLS: advanced cardiac life support; CI: confidence interval; CPR: cardiopulmonary resuscitation; min: minutes; epi: epinephrine; pts: patients; OR: odds ratio; RCT: randomized controlled trial; ROSC: return of spontaneous circulation; SB: sodium bicarbonate.