Earlier Hypothermia Attainment is Associated with Improved Outcomes after Cardiac Arrest
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10320333

How to Cite

Nicole A Chiota, William D Freeman, & Kevin Barrett. (2023). Earlier Hypothermia Attainment is Associated with Improved Outcomes after Cardiac Arrest. Journal of Vascular and Interventional Neurology, 4(1). Retrieved from https://ojs.jvin.org/index.php/jvin/article/view/314

Abstract

  • Introduction: Therapeutic hypothermia (TH, 32-34ºC) reduces mortality and improves neurologic outcomes after ventricular fibrillation
    cardiac arrest (CA). The relationship between time to achieve TH and outcomes remains undefined. We hypothesized that a shorter
    interval from CA to achieve TH would be associated with improved neurologic outcome.
    Methods: We retrospectively reviewed subjects within or out-of-hospital CA treated with TH
    between November 2006 and April 2009 at our institution. The time to target temperature
    was defined as the interval between witnessed CA and first measurement of hypothermia
    (≤ 34 ºC) and further categorized as early (< 6 hours) or delayed (> 6 hours). Outcomes were
    assessed atthe time of death or discharge usingCerebral PerformanceCategory Score (CPC);
    good outcome was defined as CPC ≤ 2. Fisher’s Exact test was used to assess the univariate
    relationship between time to TH and outcome.
    Results: 26 patients achieved TH after in-hospital (39%) and out-of-hospital (61%) CA. Five
    patients (5/26) reached early target temperature; 80% (4/5) of those had a good neurological
    outcome. 24%(5/21) ofsubjectswithdelayedtargettemperature achieveda goodneurological
    outcome. The univariate relationship between time to target temperature and neurological
    outcome was statistically significant (p=0.034).
    Conclusion: Attaining TH within 6 hours of in or out-of-hospital CA was associated with a
    greater likelihood of a good neurological outcome at discharge. Time from CA to achieved
    TH should be included as a clinically important covariate in future studies of predictors of outcome after CA.
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10320333
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Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Vascular and Interventional Neurology

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