Resuscitation
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Observational Study
Trends in Overdose-Related Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Arizona.
Opioid overdose mortality has increased in North America; however, recent regional trends in the proportion of treated overdose-related out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OD-OHCA) compared to out-of-hospital cardiac arrest of presumed cardiac etiology (C-OHCA) are largely unknown. Our aim is to assess trends in the prevalence and outcomes of OD-OHCAs compared to C-OHCAs in Arizona. ⋯ There has been a significant increase in the proportion of OD-OHCAs in Arizona between 2010-2015. OD-OHCA patients were younger, were less likely to present with a shockable rhythm, and more likely to survive than patients with C-OHCA. These data should be considered in prevention and treatment efforts.
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Comparative Study
Validation of the return of spontaneous circulation after cardiac arrest (RACA) score in two different national territories.
The likelihood of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is influenced by unmodifiable (gender, aetiology, location, the presence of witnesses and initial rhythm) and modifiable factors (bystander CPR and the time to EMS arrival). All of these have been included in the ROSC After Cardiac Arrest (RACA) score. ⋯ The application of the RACA score reliably assess the probability to obtain the ROSC, with equal effectiveness in the two regions, despite different organization of the resuscitation network. Patients with a RACA score >0.42 had more than 50% probability to obtain ROSC.
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Early EEG patterns and SSEP responses are associated with neurological recovery of comatose patients with postanoxic encephalopathy after cardiac arrest. However, the nature and distribution of brain damage underlying the characteristic EEG and SSEP patterns are unknown. We relate EEG and SSEP findings with results from histological analyses of the brains of eleven non-survivors. ⋯ Absent SSEP responses were always accompanied by thalamic damage. Pathological burst suppression patterns were associated with a variable degree of neuronal damage to cortex, cerebellum and hippocampus. In patients with additional thalamic involvement, burst-suppression with identical bursts was observed, a characteristic EEG pattern presumably reflecting residual activity from a relatively isolated and severely compromised cortex.
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Since the introduction of targeted temperature management (TTM), the accuracy and timing of prognostic tests for post-cardiac arrest patients have changed. Although previous studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of a multimodal approach in assessing the prognosis of TTM patients, few studies have investigated an optimised strategy that sequentially combines different prognostic modalities. This study identified an optimal sequential combination of prognostic modalities to predict poor neurologic outcomes in patients undergoing TTM. ⋯ Our stepwise model showed excellent prognostic ability to predict poor outcomes at one month after cardiac arrest and may be used to minimise the risk of false pessimistic predictions in patients undergoing TTM.
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Existing methods to predict recovery after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) lack of accuracy. The aim of this study was to determine whether quantitative proton chemical shift imaging (1H-CSI) during the subacute stage of OHCA can predict neurological outcome of such patients. ⋯ In this preliminary study we found that multivoxel 1H-CSI in lenticular cores was highly predictive of unfavorable outcome at 6 months.