Conference Coverage

Survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest usually had intact brain function


 

FROM THE AHA SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS

References

Most adults who survived out-of-hospital cardiac arrests remained neurologically intact, even if cardiopulmonary resuscitation lasted longer than has been recommended, authors of a retrospective observational study reported at the American Heart Association scientific sessions.

Dr. Jefferson Williams of the Wake County Department of Emergency Medical Services in Raleigh, N.C., and his associates studied 3,814 adults who had a cardiac arrest outside the hospital between 2005 and 2014. Only 12% of patients survived, but 84% of survivors had a cerebral performance category of 1 or 2, including 10% who underwent more than 35 minutes of CPR before reaching the hospital.

Dr. Jefferson Williams

Dr. Jefferson Williams

Neurologically intact survival was associated with having an initial shockable rhythm, a bystander-witnessed arrest, and return of spontaneous circulation in the field rather than in the hospital. Age, basic airway management, and therapeutic hypothermia phase also predicted survival with intact brain function, but duration of CPR did not.

Dr. Williams had no disclosures. The senior author disclosed research funding from the Medtronic Foundation.

Recommended Reading

EASD: SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin cuts CV risk in patients with type 2 diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
Prostate cancer: Men with comorbidity may be better off with no ADT
MDedge Family Medicine
Empagliflozin’s triumph respins FDA’s diabetes drug mandate
MDedge Family Medicine
ESC: LV response to exercise differs in women
MDedge Family Medicine
TCT: CTO treatment after MI doesn’t benefit LV function
MDedge Family Medicine
New CPR guide sets compression limits, scratches vasopressin
MDedge Family Medicine
For subacute STEMI, thrombectomy adds no benefit to PCI
MDedge Family Medicine
ESC: Air quality level linked to STEMI risk in men
MDedge Family Medicine
Depression, hypertension combo compounds cardiovascular risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Every 10° C temperature drop increases STEMI risk by 7%
MDedge Family Medicine