Resuscitation
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Observational Study
Kidneys recovered from brain dead cardiac arrest patients resuscitated with ECPR show similar one-year graft survival compared to other donors.
Among patients treated with extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) as a second line of treatment for refractory out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), some may develop brain death and become eligible for organ donation. The objective of this study was to evaluate long-term outcomes of kidney grafts recovered from these patients. ⋯ Organ transplantation from patients treated with ECPR after refractory OHCA showed one-year kidney graft survival rates comparable to those of patients not treated with ECPR.
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We aimed to quantify the association of no-flow interval in out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) with the odds of neurologically favorable survival and survival to hospital discharge/ 30th day. Our secondary aim was to explore futility thresholds to guide clinical decisions, such as prehospital termination of resuscitation. ⋯ We demonstrated that prolonged no-flow interval had a significant effect on lower odds of favorable neurological outcomes, with medical futility occurring when no-flow interval was >12 mins (>7.5 mins for witnessed arrest). Our study adds to the literature of the importance of early CPR and EMS response and provided a threshold beyond traditional 'down-times', which could aid clinical decisions in TOR or OHCA management.
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Observational Study
Predicting ICU admission and death in the Emergency Department: A comparison of six early warning scores.
To compare the ability of the most used Early Warning Scores (EWS) to identify adult patients at risk of poor outcomes in the emergency department (ED). ⋯ NEWS is the most accurate EWS for predicting the risk of death/ICU admission within 24 h from ED arrival. The score also had a fair calibration with few events occurring in patients classified at low risk. Neural network analysis suggests the need for further improvements by focusing on the prompt diagnosis of sepsis and the development of practical tools for the measurement of the respiratory rate.
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Biosensor technologies have been proposed as a solution to provide recognition and facilitate earlier responses to unwitnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) cases. We sought to estimate the effect of recognition on survival and modelled the potential incremental impact of increased recognition of unwitnessed cases on survival to hospital discharge, to demonstrate the potential benefit of biosensor technologies. ⋯ Unwitnessed OHCA account for the majority of OHCAs, yet survival is dismal. Methods to improve recognition, such as with biosensor technologies, may lead to substantial improvements in overall survival.