| Literature DB >> 27142588 |
Hans Kirkegaard1, Bodil S Rasmussen2, Inge de Haas2, Jørgen Feldbæk Nielsen3, Susanne Ilkjær4, Anne Kaltoft5, Anni Nørregaard Jeppesen6, Anders Grejs6, Christophe Henri Valdemar Duez6, Alf Inge Larsen7,8, Ville Pettilä9,10, Valdo Toome11, Urmet Arus12, Fabio Silvio Taccone13, Christian Storm14, Markus B Skrifvars9, Eldar Søreide15,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The application of therapeutic hypothermia (TH) for 12 to 24 hours following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has been associated with decreased mortality and improved neurological function. However, the optimal duration of cooling is not known. We aimed to investigate whether targeted temperature management (TTM) at 33 ± 1 °C for 48 hours compared to 24 hours results in a better long-term neurological outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Mild therapeutic hypothermia; Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; Prolonged target temperature management; Target temperature management
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27142588 PMCID: PMC4855491 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-016-1338-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Cerebral Performance Categories Score
| CPC1. Good cerebral performance |
| Conscious. Alert, able to work and lead a normal life. May have minor psychological or neurological deficits (mild dysphasia, non-incapacitating hemiparesis, or minor cranial nerve abnormalities) |
| CPC 2. Moderate cerebral disability |
| Conscious. Sufficient cerebral function for part-time work in a sheltered environment or independent activities of daily life (dressing, traveling by public transportation, and preparing food). May have hemiplegia, seizures, ataxia, dysarthria, dysphasia, or permanent memory or mental changes |
| CPC 3. Severe cerebral disability |
| Conscious. Dependent on others for daily support because of impaired brain function (in an institution or at home with exceptional family effort). At least limited cognition. Includes a wide range of cerebral abnormalities from ambulatory with severe memory disturbance or dementia precluding independent existence to paralytic and able to communicate only with eyes, as in the locked-in syndrome |
| CPC 4. Coma, Vegetative state |
| Not conscious. Unaware of surroundings, no cognition. No verbal or psychological interactions with environment |
| CPC 5. Death |
| Certified brain dead or dead by traditional criteria |
Fig. 1Outcome. Outcome assessment over the study period
Adverse events. Adverse events and definitions, reported from day 1 to discharge from the primary hospital
| Adverse events | Definitions | |
|---|---|---|
| Cerebral | Pupils | Reacting to light, dilated (size), dilation difference between eyes |
| Seizure | Involuntary contractions or series of contractions of the voluntary muscles | |
| Myoclonus | Short lasting involuntary contractions of one or several muscles | |
| Myoclonus state | Continuous myoclonus | |
| Convulsive state | Continuous seizures or continuous seizure pattern on EEG | |
| Circulation | Hypotension | Mild: MAP >60 mmHg with one inotropic agent and volume infusion |
| Moderate: MAP >60 mmHg with full treatment | ||
| Severe: MAP 50–60 mmHg despite full treatment | ||
| Circulatory failure: MAP <50 mmHg for more than 10 min despite full treatment | ||
| Need for pacing | ||
| Resuscitation | ||
| Arrhythmias | Mild | Arrhythmias that do not demand treatment |
| Moderate | Stable haemodynamics (MAP >60 mmHg) with treatment | |
| Severe | Pulseless VT/VF or unstable haemodynamics despite treatment | |
| Gastrointestinal | Mild | Aspiration, can partly take enteral nutrition |
| Moderate | Aspiration more than 400 ml, cannot take any enteral nutrition | |
| Severe | Ileus, bleeding gastric ulcer, need for explorative laparotomy or others | |
| Urological | Continuous or intermittent replacement therapy | |
| Infectious/inflammatory | Pneumonia | New or progressing infiltrations on thoracic X-ray |
| Fever (not during hypothermia treatment) | ||
| Leucocytosis | ||
| Purulent tracheobronchial secretion | ||
| SIRSa | At least 2 of 4 SIRS criteria present | |
| Sepsis | Sepsis, SIRS caused by an infection | |
| Severe sepsis | Sepsis associated with organ dysfunction | |
| Septic shock | Sepsis with hypotensionb | |
| Bleeding and transfusion | Bleeding | Mild: no transfusion needed |
| Moderate: up to two RBC units/24 hours. | ||
| Severe: more than two RBC units/24 hours | ||
| Critical bleeding in organs: intracranial, intrathecal, intraocular or pericardial | ||
| Other bleeding: retroperitoneal, thorax or solid organs | ||
| Transfusion | Number of transfusions | |
EEG electroencephalogram, MAP mean arterial pressure, VF ventricular fibrillation, VT ventricular tachycardia
aSIRS: temperature >38 °C or <36 °C, pulse rate >90 beats/min, respiratory rate >20 breath/min or PaCO2 < 4.3 kPa or need for mechanical ventilation, leucocytes >12,000 cells/mm3, or <4000 cells/mm3, or >10 % immature cells
RBC: red blood cell
bsystolic blood pressure <90 mmHg or a reduction >40 mmHg from baseline and perfusions abnormalities or need for vasoactive drugs despite adequate volume treatment in the absence of other reasons for hypotension
Fig. 2Inclusion rate. Inclusion rate up to the first 304 patients (1 February 2016). Allocation of the last of the 350 patients is anticipated to be late May 2016. The solid line represents included patients; the broken line represents the expected inclusion rate