| Literature DB >> 27273245 |
Hubertus von Korn1, Victor Stefan2, Reyn van Ewijk3, Kamalesh Chakraborty2, Burkhard Sanwald2, Jan Hemker2, Ulrich Hink4, Marc Ohlow5, Bernward Lauer5, Dierk Vagts6, Stefan Gruene7, Thomas Münzel4.
Abstract
A literature on systematic treatment protocols for patients after resuscitation for cardiac arrest is lacking. We evaluated a systematic protocol, including ECG, echocardiogram, urgent cardiac catheterisation ("STEMI-like" workflow), CT scans, laboratory findings, IABP, hypothermia, and cMRI, prospectively over 5 years. The primary endpoint was the Cerebral Performance Category Scale (CPCS). During the period from January 2008 to December 2012, 212 patients were included. The mean age was 66.7 years, n = 151 (71.2 %) were male, mean time from the first medical contact to start of catheterisation was 76.6 min, and ventricular fibrillation (VF) was present in n = 99 (46.7 %). A significant coronary artery stenosis was seen in n = 130 (61.3 %), PCI was performed in n = 101 (47.6 %), an ACS was found in n = 100 (47.2 %), n = 91 patients (42.9 %) had another cardiac cause, an extra-cardiac cause was found in n = 12 (5.7 %, mostly a cerebral process), and in 9 patients (4.3 %), no cause was identifiable. A significant difference in mortality was found for patients with TIMI flow 2/3 vs. 0/1 (65.4 vs. 95.7 %, p < 0.01). The difference of intra-aortic balloon pumping vs. no pumping was not significant, performing hypothermia reduced mortality significantly (52.7 vs. 68.2 %, p = 0.04). The survival rate was n = 76 (35.9 %), a CPCS of 1/2 was reached in n = 68 pts (32.1 %), patients with ongoing resuscitation had a 100 % mortality (n = 41), and VF had a lower mortality (54.6 vs. 72.6 %, p < 0.01). A systematic algorithm may improve the outcome of patients after reanimation compared with classically reported outcomes. The data are hypothesis generating for further studies.Entities:
Keywords: Resuscitation; Therapy and diagnosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27273245 DOI: 10.1007/s11739-016-1480-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Emerg Med ISSN: 1828-0447 Impact factor: 3.397