• Neurocritical care · Jun 2012

    Outcomes of mild therapeutic hypothermia after in-hospital cardiac arrest.

    • Pierre Kory, Mayuko Fukunaga, Joseph P Mathew, Bimaljeet Singh, Lisa Szainwald, Joseph Mosak, Mathew Marks, Dana Berg, Meir Saadia, Annie Katz, and Paul H Mayo.
    • Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, NY, USA. pkory@chpnet.org
    • Neurocrit Care. 2012 Jun 1;16(3):406-12.

    BackgroundAlthough the benefits of mild therapeutic hypothermia (MTH) in selected patients after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest have been consistently demonstrated, no controlled trial of MTH in selected patients after in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) has been published. We sought to assess the benefit of MTH after IHCA in patients meeting our institutions IHCA MTH inclusion criteria.MethodsA retrospective, historical control study was performed. During the 3-year period before and after the 2006 MTH protocol implementation at our institution, we identified a total of 118 patients admitted to our Medical Intensive Care Unit after resuscitation from an IHCA. Two blinded investigators identified all patients meeting our institutions MTH protocol inclusion criteria and the patients in each time period were compared. The primary outcome was discharge with good neurological function.Results33 IHCA patients met MTH protocol inclusion criteria; 16 patients were admitted prior to MTH protocol implementation and thus were not treated with MTH post arrest while 17 patients were admitted after implementation and were all treated with MTH post arrest. 91% of patients had an arrest rhythm of asystole or pulseless electrical activity. Good neurological function at discharge was found in 24% of MTH patients and 31% of controls (P = .62).ConclusionsNo difference in neurological outcome at discharge was detected in predominantly non-shockable IHCA patients treated with MTH. This finding, if confirmed with further study, may define a population of patients for whom this costly and resource intensive therapy should be withheld.

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