Literature DB >> 27048406

Good neurological outcome despite very low regional cerebral oxygen saturation during resuscitation--a prospective preclinical trial in 29 patients.

Christian Storm1, Alexander Wutzler2, Lars Trenkmann3, Alexander Krannich4, Sabrina von Rheinbarben3, Fridolin Luckenbach3, Jens Nee3, Natalie Otto3, Tim Schroeder3, Christoph Leithner5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Noninvasive regional cerebral oxygen saturation (rSO2) measurement using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) might inform on extent and duration of cerebral hypoxia during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). This information may be used to guide resuscitation efforts and may carry relevant early prognostic information.
METHODS: We prospectively investigated non-traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients on scene. NIRS was started either during CPR or shortly after (<2 min) return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) by emergency medical service (EMS). Outcome was determined at intensive care unit (ICU) discharge and 6 months after cardiac arrest.
RESULTS: A total of 29 OHCA patients were included. In 23 patients NIRS was started during CPR and in 6 patients immediately after ROSC. 18 (62.1%) patients did not reach ROSC. Initial rSO2 during CPR was very low (<50% in all 23 patients, < 30% in 19 of 23 patients) with no significant difference between patients achieving ROSC and those who did not. Of five patients with ROSC, in whom NIRS was recorded during CPR, two reached a good six-months outcome (initial rSO2 22%) and three died during the ICU stay (initial rSO2 15, 16 and 46%). In six patients with NIRS started immediately after ROSC (<2 min), rSO2 was substantially higher (54-85 %) than in patients during CPR (p = 0.006). DISCUSSION AND
CONCLUSION: Initial frontal brain rSO2 determined by NIRS during CPR was generally very low and recovered rapidly after ROSC. Very low initial rSO2 during CPR was compatible with good neurological outcome in our limited cohort of patients. Further studies are needed to assess in larger cohorts and more detail the implications of very low initial rSO2 during CPR on scene.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cardiac arrest; Near infrared spectroscopy; Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; Outcome

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27048406      PMCID: PMC4822235          DOI: 10.1186/s13049-016-0234-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med        ISSN: 1757-7241            Impact factor:   2.953


Background

The extent of hypoxic encephalopathy (HE) largely determines outcome in patients after cardiac arrest and resuscitation. In principle, the severity and duration of brain hypoxia during cardiac arrest (CA) can be determined by noninvasive near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) during resuscitation. The brain extracts only around one third of the oxygen delivered under physiological conditions, thus normal values of frontal brain rSO2 determined by NIRS monitors are around 60–80 %. As the brain has no oxygen reserves and demand is high, brain oxygen saturation drops to very low values very shortly after cardiac arrest [1]. During total oxygen depletion, nonoxidative metabolism can deliver sufficient ATP to prevent irreversible neuronal damage for a few minutes. Hypoxic encephalopathy can only be prevented by restoring oxygen delivery via effective resuscitation before irreversible damage has occured. NIRS may be used to guide resuscitation efforts by indicating the achieved cerebral oxygenation which is one of the primary targets of CPR [1, 2]. Few studies have measured regional brain oxygen saturation using NIRS in patients during resuscitation [3]. The study settings were heterogeneous. Most importantly, large studies have been reported on NIRS started upon hospital arrival as opposed to studies which measured NIRS during CPR on scene [4-8]. Likely, measurements started during CPR upon hospital arrvial cover a much later time point after cardiac arrest as compared to measurements started during CPR on scene and thus, results obtained in these two different settings need to be compared with great care. In principle, a lower threshold for the initial rSO2 during resusciation may exist below which ROSC or survival with good outcome are rare [8]. On the other hand, brain rSO2 may change rapidly during CPR and full recovery of brain tissue is possible if the periods of severe hypoxia are short enough to allow for survival of neurons via non-oxidative metabolism [9]. To contribute to the understanding of prognostic implications of brain oxygen saturation during CPR, we performed a prospective study on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients using near-infrared spectroscopy to determine frontal brain rSO2 during CPR in the field at the earliest possible time point.

Methods

The local ethics committee of the Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin approved the study protocol and the trial was registered (www.clinicaltrials.gov: NCT 01531426). For all survivors a healthcare proxy was contacted to give written informed consent as all cardiac arrest survivors were unconscious on admission. Nontraumatic cardiac arrest patients of cardiac and non-cardiac etiology were enrolled between January 2012 and January 2013.

Pre-hospital treatment

Advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) was performed according to current guidelines. NIRS monitoring started out-of-hospital and was continued until the end of the rewarming procedure (approximately 41 h in total) in all survivors. The INVOS monitor (INVOS 5100 C; Covidien; Mansfield, USA) was used. Of note, the lower rSO2 detection limit of the monitor was 15 % in our study. The two surface sensors were placed on the forehead for detection of bilateral frontal cerebral oxygen saturation. The monitor detects the absorption of light at wavelengths of 724 nm and 810 nm and calculates regional hemoglobin oxygen saturation (rSO2). For analysis of the recorded spectroscopy data the software package provided by COVIDIEN was used (INVOS Analytics Tool, Version 1.2). The mean value between right and left sensor was calculated. For the purposes of our preclinical study, we determined the first reliably measured value and refer to it as ‘initial rSO2’. We have previously reported rSO2 measurements continued until the end of hypothermia treatment [10]. An additional paramedic not involved in patient care performed the trial-related monitoring, carefully avoiding any interference with the ACLS team. The NIRS sensors were placed during cardiopulmonary resuscitation or within two minutes after ROSC. Forehead and upper part of the body positioning was standardized at 30° in all patients during the whole period of treatment and this position was adopted immediately after ROSC at the scene.

Hospital treatment

All patients received cardiac arrest treatment according to our written local standard operating procedure and post-resuscitation care according to current guidelines as described in detail elswhere (24 h at 33 °C followed by slow rewarming 0.25°/h) [10]. Hypothermia was performed with a computer controlled feedback surface-cooling device (Arctic Sun; C.R.BARD).

Outcome assessment

For survivors, outcome was assessed at discharge from the ICU and at 6-months follow up by the Pittsburgh Cerebral Performance Category (CPC) Scale. Because both short and long-term outcomes were assessed, we defined good outcome as CPC 1–2 and poor outcome as CPC 3–5. For the 6-months follow up, the patient or a proxy was contacted by telephone to assess CPC. Data on mortality was obtained by the German residents registry.

Statistics

Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS (IBM SPSS Version 20) and R (R 3.1.2, The R Project). Due to the low number of patients, data are presented as individual values and as median and quartiles (IQR) or absolute numbers and percent. For comparison of rSO2 between different groups a Wilcoxon-Mann–Whitney-Test was performed. A significance level of α = 0.05 was used.

Results

In 29 patients data recorded by the EMS during CPR (n = 23) or shortly after ROSC (n = 6) were available (study flow chart, Fig. 1). Baseline characteristics of all patients are given in Table 1. 18 patients (62 %) did not achieve ROSC. 11 patients (38 %) were admitted to the ICU after ROSC. Of those, three had good outcome (CPC 1–2) at ICU discharge and eight had poor outocme (one CPC 3, seven CPC 5) (Table 2). All patients discharged (n = 4) were followed up at 6 months. The three patients discharged with CPC 1–2 continued with a good neurological status (all CPC 1), one patient was discharged with CPC 3 and had died at 6 month follow up.
Fig. 1

Flow chart of the trial population. CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation; ROSC return of spontaneous circulation; *NIRS starteted after ROSC within ≤ 2 min; CPC cerebral performance category (1–2 good neurological outcome; CPC 3–5 poor neurological outcome); CA cardiac arrest

Table 1

Baseline characteristics

Post ROSCPre ROSCNo ROSC
n 6518
Age (years) (mean (sd))68 (9)66 (7)61(14)
Sex male n (%)6 (100)4 (80)14 (78)
APACHE score (median [IQR])28 [20, 36]37 [20, 40]-
Shockable rhythm n (%)
 Ventricular fibrillation2 (33)1 (20)4 (22)
 Asystolic1 (17)3 (60)9 (50)
 EMD3 (50)1 (20)5 (27)
Time to ROSC (min) (median [IQR])19 [11, 27]12 [9, 16]-
Total epinephrine dose (mg) (median [IQR])2 [0.5, 4.25]1 [1, 2]7 [4, 9.5]
Haemoglobin (g/dl) (median [IQR])12 [11, 14]13 [12, 15]-
Lactate (median [IQR])29 [27, 45]52 [43, 60]-
Time on ventilator (hours) (median [IQR])382 [164, 458]212 [73, 388]-
Length of ICU stay (days) (median [IQR])17 [8, 20]14 [3, 16]-

Data are given as median and interquartile range (IQR) or absolute numbers and percent. ‘Post ROSC’ designates the group of patients in which NIRS was started shortly after ROSC, ‘pre ROSC’ designates the group with NIRS started during CPR and who achieved ROSC, ‘no ROSC’ the group with NIRS during CPR but no ROSC. APACHE Acute Physiology And Chronic Health Evaluation; OHCA out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; ROSC return of spontaneous circulation; ICU intensive care unit; EMD electromechanical dissociation; PaO2 arterial oxygen partial pressure; SO2 peripheral oxygen saturation; PaCO2 arterial carbon dioxide partial pressure; FiO2 fraction of inspired oxygen

Table 2

Data of n = 29 patients included by EMS divided into NIRS during CPR without ROSC (n = 18), ROSC (n = 5) and NIRS started after ROSC (n = 6)

rSO2 EMS data n = 29
rSO2 (%)OutcometROSC (min)First rhythmAge (years)Sex
rSO2 during CPR n = 23Discharge6 month
Pre ROSC n = 5
 146 %CPC 516asystole59male
 222 %CPC 1CPC 18asystole73male
 315 %CPC 512asystole65female
 416 %CPC 519PEA72male
 522 %CPC 1CPC 19VF58male
No ROSC n = 18
 115 %CPC 5asystole50female
 215 %CPC 5asystole72female
 315 %CPC 5asystole89female
 415 %CPC 5PEA52male
 515 %CPC 5VF58male
 615 %CPC 5VF73male
 715 %CPC 5VF55male
 841 %CPC 5PEA64male
 916 %CPC 5asystole46male
 1020 %CPC 5PEA63female
 1122 %CPC 5asystole65male
 1215 %CPC 5VF75male
 1335 %CPC 5asystole78male
 1415 %CPC 5asystole43male
 1542 %CPC 5asystole61male
 1615 %CPC 5asystole47male
 1715 %CPC 5PEA76male
 1815 %CPC 5PEA42male
Post ROSC n = 6
 163 %CPC 519asystole73male
 271 %CPC 530VF61male
 357 %CPC 560PEA68male
 454 %CPC 55PEA84male
 580 %CPC 1CPC 19VF61male
 685 %CPC 3CPC 518PEA60male

Initial rSO2, outcome, time to ROSC, first rhythm, age and sex are given

Flow chart of the trial population. CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation; ROSC return of spontaneous circulation; *NIRS starteted after ROSC within ≤ 2 min; CPC cerebral performance category (1–2 good neurological outcome; CPC 3–5 poor neurological outcome); CA cardiac arrest Baseline characteristics Data are given as median and interquartile range (IQR) or absolute numbers and percent. ‘Post ROSC’ designates the group of patients in which NIRS was started shortly after ROSC, ‘pre ROSC’ designates the group with NIRS started during CPR and who achieved ROSC, ‘no ROSC’ the group with NIRS during CPR but no ROSC. APACHE Acute Physiology And Chronic Health Evaluation; OHCA out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; ROSC return of spontaneous circulation; ICU intensive care unit; EMD electromechanical dissociation; PaO2 arterial oxygen partial pressure; SO2 peripheral oxygen saturation; PaCO2 arterial carbon dioxide partial pressure; FiO2 fraction of inspired oxygen Data of n = 29 patients included by EMS divided into NIRS during CPR without ROSC (n = 18), ROSC (n = 5) and NIRS started after ROSC (n = 6) Initial rSO2, outcome, time to ROSC, first rhythm, age and sex are given

Initial regional oxygen saturation and ROSC

Of 23 patients with NIRS started during CPR,18 never reached ROSC. Clinical details and initial rSO2 of the individual patients are shown in Table 2. Figure 2 illustrates initial rSO2 of patients who did not achieve ROSC (‘no ROSC’), those in whom NIRS was started during CPR and who achieved ROSC (‘pre-ROSC’) and those in whom NIRS was started within two minutes after ROSC (‘post ROSC’). Initial rSO2 in the patients with no ROSC was generally very low (median 16 %, IQR 15–29 %). Initial rSO2 was also low in the five patients with ROSC in whom NIRS was started during CPR (15, 16, 22, 23 and 46 %, Table 2). The difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.312). In six patients NIRS monitoring could not be started pre-ROSC but immediately after ROSC. Initial rSO2 was substantially higher (54–85 %) in these patients as compared with patients with pre-ROSC NIRS monitoring (p = 0.006, Fig. 2).
Fig. 2

Initial rSO2 (median and IQR) for patients in whom NIRS was started within two minutes after ROSC (‘post-ROSC’), patients in whom NIRS was started during CPR and who achieved ROSC (‘pre-ROSC’) and in patients during CPR who did not achieve ROSC (‘no ROSC’)

Initial rSO2 (median and IQR) for patients in whom NIRS was started within two minutes after ROSC (‘post-ROSC’), patients in whom NIRS was started during CPR and who achieved ROSC (‘pre-ROSC’) and in patients during CPR who did not achieve ROSC (‘no ROSC’)

Initial regional oxygen saturation and neurological outcome

Five patients with NIRS recording during CPR reached ROSC. Two of those patients had a good outcome (CPC 1, both at discharge and at six months). The initial rSO2 of both of these two patients was 22 %. Three patients with ROSC in whom NIRS was recorded during CPR died during ICU stay. The initial rSO2 of these patients was 15, 16 and 46 %; Table 2). In six patients monitoring started approximately two minutes after ROSC. One patient had a good outcome (CPC1) and of the remaining five patients, four died during the ICU stay and one had CPC3 at ICU discharge and had died at six months follow-up. The patient with good outcome had a high initial post-ROSC rSO2 (80 %).

Withdrawal of treatment

In 5 patients ICU treatment was withdrawn due to severe hypoxic encephalopathy (n = 4) and multi-organ failure (n = 1). Withdrawal of treatment for hypoxic encephalopathy was done after repetitive neurological examination, neurophysiologcial, radiological and laboratory testing if available (including somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEP), neuro-specific enoloase (NSE), brain computed tomography (CT) and electroencephalography EEG) following a standardized pathway. Brain oxygen saturation measurements were not used for prognostic purposes.

Discussion

Our main findings are: (1) Patients with initially very low regional cerebral oxygen saturation (as low as 22 % determined by a commercially available near-infrared spectroscopy monitor) during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and resuscitation may survive with good outcome. (2) Intial rSO2 during CPR obtained immediately after arrival of EMS was generally low and did not allow to predict ROSC or neurological outcome. (3) Immediately (<2 min) after ROSC, rSO2 was substantially higher at or close to physiological values (54-85 % in six patients).

Pre-ROSC rSO2

The very low regional frontal brain oxygen saturation observed in our study is in line with previous reports. For example, in an early report with NIRS during CPR, Newman and coworkers found no detectable cerebral oxygen saturation during CPR in all of sixteen subjects [11]. Parnia and coworkers also found very low initial rSO2 (15–21 %) determined by NIRS during CPR in 15 cardiac arrest patients. Increasing rSO2 with ongoing CPR was observed which was associated with ROSC in their study [12]. In another trial, Parnia and coworkers demonstrated low rSO2 during manual chest compression (median rSO2 24 %) and significantly higher values in patients treated with an automated chest compression device (median rSO2 53 %) [13]. Schewe and coworkers reported similar results [4]. Kämäräinen also demonstrated very low rSO2 during manual CPR which did not substantially increase by improving manual CPR technique [14]. In line with our results, Genbrugge et al. reported no significant difference between initial rSO2 in patients achieving ROSC compared to those who did not when NIRS was started during CPR on scene [5]. Taken together, these studies consistently show a very low cerebral oxygen saturation as measured by commercially available NIRS monitors during cardiac arrest and CPR. Clearly, brain hypoxia during CPR causes severe hypoxic encephalopathy in many patients. However, when interpreting rSO2 measurements during CPR it needs to be kept in mind that compared to the cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen in an awake state the brain needs much less oxygen to simply maintain cell viability. Furthermore, regional brain rSO2 does not directly inform on the amount of oxygen delivered to the brain and thus low rSO2 obtained at a single time point cannot predict the extent of hypoxic encephalopathy. It may be, however, that integrating information on duration and extent of hypoxia measured by NIRS may allow for a largely reliable prediction of outcome and may be used in the future among other parameters in the decision to continue or stop resucitation efforts.

Post ROSC rSO2

In our study, the six patients with rSO2 measurement started immediately after ROSC (<2 min) showed regional frontal brain oxygenation at or close to physiological values (54–85 %). The rapid increase of rSO2 following ROSC suggested by this finding is in line with previous reports. E.g., Genbrugge and coworkers demonstrated rSO2 changes from 25–30 % immediately pre-ROSC up to 60–70 % two minutes post-ROSC in a cardiac arrest patient [9]. Kämäräinen et al. found a median rSO2 of 60 % in seven patients eight minutes after ROSC [14]. Ito and coworkers found substantially higher rSO2 in cardiac arrest patients with detectable pulses (ROSC) upon hospital arrival (51 %) as compared to those without (19 %). Collectively, these studies indicate that rSO2 rapidly increases after ROSC to median/mean values close to physiological rSO2.

Initial rSO2 and outcome prediction

In a recent large multicenter trial, Ito and coworkers found very low initial rSO2 (15 % as determined by a commercially available NIRS monitor, representing the lower measurement threshold) in three patients with good neurological outcome [6]. Only 29 out of 672 patients in this study had a good outcome. In contrast to our study with NIRS started on scene, Ito and coworkers started rSO2 measurements upon hospital arrival after EMS transfer with ongoing CPR. Termination of CPR is not allowed for EMS in Japan. Our cohort was collected in a large urban area with a short response time of EMS. Thus, it is very likely that in our study NIRS was started much earlier in the course of CPR than in the study by Ito and coworkers. A subset of patients in the study by Ito and coworkers had already achieved ROSC when NIRS was started upon hospital arrival which explains the more frequent finding of high initial rSO2 in their study [6]. Taken together, our study and the study by Ito and coworkers underscore that patients may recover with good neurological outcome despite very low frontal brain rSO2 recorded during CPR on scene as well as upon hospital arrival. Very recently, Nishiyama and coworkers reported a very large study on NIRS during CPR at hospital arrival. Their results indicate that the proportion of patients with good neurological outcome at the lowest measured initial rSO2 (15 %, the lower detection limit of the monitor) is very low. Although our patient cohort is smaller, our results indicate that initial rSO2 obtained during CPR at hospital arrival and initial rSO2 obtained during CPR on scene (in a setting with short EMS response time) bear different prognostic implications. Before NIRS started during CPR on scene may be used for prediction of outcome and in decisions to terminate CPR, further large studies on the relationship between duration and extent of regional brain hypoxia as measured by NIRS and outcome are needed.

Limitations

Because ROSC is achieved in less than half of patients with cardiac arrest and less than half of those have had a good neurological outcome, the number of patients with good neurological outcome included was small. Thus, we could not determine the distribution of initial rSO2 during CPR in a large cohort of patients with good neurological outcome. Larger studies are desirable to determine whether our two cases of good neurological outcome despite very low initial rSO2 are exceptional. Furthermore, we did not record the course of rSO2 during resuscitation until ROSC which would have allowed for am more detailed investigation. It is also possible that the cause of arrest may influence the relationsship between rSO2 recorded during CPR and outcome. E.g., patients with respiratory arrest may have significant hypoxia already prior to the cardiac arrest which could influence the periode between cardiac arrest and irreversible neuronal damage. We did not record the time between collapse/emergency call and first NIRS recording with sufficient precision. This may influence the relationsship between initial rSO2 and outcome or chance of ROSC and it would be interesting to investigate this question in future studies. Calculation of regional brain oxygen saturation using noninvasive near-infrared spectroscopy is complex and results may differ between different commercially available NIRS-monitors due to different rSO2 calculation algorithms. The NIRS signal does not originate exclusively from brain tissue and therefore, confounding by extracerebral sources is possible. The sample volume within the brain contains arteries, capillaries and veins with different oxygen tensions. The composition of the sample volume varies from patient to patient. Thus, the absolute values for rSO2 reported in this study need to be interpreted with caution and do not represent average brain tissue oxygenation.

Conclusion

Initial brain oxygen saturation is genearlly very low in cardiac arrest patients immediately after arrival of EMS. Very low initial brain oxygen saturation is compatible with ROSC and with good neurological outcome and should not be regarded as an absolute poor prognostic sign.
  14 in total

1.  Cerebral oximetry - the holy grail of non-invasive cerebral perfusion monitoring in cardiac arrest or just a false dawn?

Authors:  Sam Parnia
Journal:  Resuscitation       Date:  2011-11-04       Impact factor: 5.262

2.  Quality controlled manual chest compressions and cerebral oxygenation during in-hospital cardiac arrest.

Authors:  Antti Kämäräinen; Marko Sainio; Klaus T Olkkola; Heini Huhtala; Jyrki Tenhunen; Sanna Hoppu
Journal:  Resuscitation       Date:  2011-09-28       Impact factor: 5.262

3.  Application of cerebral oxygen saturation to prediction of the futility of resuscitation for out-of-hospital cardiopulmonary arrest patients: a single-center, prospective, observational study: can cerebral regional oxygen saturation predict the futility of CPR?

Authors:  Tatsuma Fukuda; Naoko Ohashi; Masahiro Nishida; Masataka Gunshin; Kent Doi; Takehiro Matsubara; Susumu Nakajima; Naoki Yahagi
Journal:  Am J Emerg Med       Date:  2014-03-05       Impact factor: 2.469

4.  Cerebral saturation monitoring during cardiopulmonary resuscitation should be used as dynamic, rather than static, information.

Authors:  Cornelia Genbrugge; Jo Dens; Ingrid Meex; Willem Boer; Frank Jans; Cathy De Deyne
Journal:  Resuscitation       Date:  2013-04-17       Impact factor: 5.262

5.  Regional cerebral oxygen saturation monitoring for predicting interventional outcomes in patients following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest of presumed cardiac cause: A prospective, observational, multicentre study.

Authors:  Kei Nishiyama; Noritoshi Ito; Tomohiko Orita; Kei Hayashida; Hideki Arimoto; Satoru Beppu; Mitsuru Abe; Takashi Unoki; Tomoyuki Endo; Akira Murai; Takeshi Hatada; Noriaki Yamada; Masahiro Mizobuchi; Hideo Himeno; Kazuo Okuchi; Hideto Yasuda; Toshiaki Mochizuki; Kazuhiro Shiga; Migaku Kikuchi; Yuka Tsujimura; Tetsuo Hatanaka; Ken Nagao
Journal:  Resuscitation       Date:  2015-08-17       Impact factor: 5.262

6.  Regional cerebral oxygen saturation after cardiac arrest in 60 patients--a prospective outcome study.

Authors:  C Storm; C Leithner; A Krannich; A Wutzler; C J Ploner; L Trenkmann; S von Rheinbarben; T Schroeder; F Luckenbach; J Nee
Journal:  Resuscitation       Date:  2014-04-30       Impact factor: 5.262

7.  Cerebral oximetry in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: standard CPR rarely provides detectable hemoglobin-oxygen saturation to the frontal cortex.

Authors:  David H Newman; Clifton W Callaway; Ian B Greenwald; Jonathan Freed
Journal:  Resuscitation       Date:  2004-11       Impact factor: 5.262

8.  A feasibility study evaluating the role of cerebral oximetry in predicting return of spontaneous circulation in cardiac arrest.

Authors:  Sam Parnia; Asad Nasir; Chirag Shah; Rajeev Patel; Anil Mani; Paul Richman
Journal:  Resuscitation       Date:  2012-02-06       Impact factor: 5.262

9.  A feasibility study of cerebral oximetry during in-hospital mechanical and manual cardiopulmonary resuscitation*.

Authors:  Sam Parnia; Asad Nasir; Anna Ahn; Hanan Malik; Jie Yang; Jiawen Zhu; Francis Dorazi; Paul Richman
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 7.598

10.  Monitoring of cerebral oxygen saturation during resuscitation in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a feasibility study in a physician staffed emergency medical system.

Authors:  Jens-Christian Schewe; Marcus O Thudium; Jochen Kappler; Folkert Steinhagen; Lars Eichhorn; Felix Erdfelder; Ulrich Heister; Richard Ellerkmann
Journal:  Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med       Date:  2014-10-05       Impact factor: 2.953

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Review 1.  How does the length of cardiopulmonary resuscitation affect brain damage in patients surviving cardiac arrest? A systematic review.

Authors:  Clare Welbourn; Nikolaos Efstathiou
Journal:  Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med       Date:  2018-09-10       Impact factor: 2.953

2.  Use of Near-Infrared Spectroscopy by Paramedics During Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Feasibility Study.

Authors:  Ian R Drennan; Joshua Gilgan; Karina Goncharenko; Steve Lin
Journal:  CJC Open       Date:  2019-07-16
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