• Am J Emerg Med · Jun 2012

    Rapid induction of hypothermia with a small volume aortic flush during cardiac arrest in pigs.

    • Wolfgang Weihs, Danica Krizanac, Fritz Sterz, Gerald Hlavin, Andreas Janata, Wolfgang Sipos, Michael Holzer, Udo M Losert, and Wilhelm Behringer.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2012 Jun 1;30(5):643-50.

    PurposeThe induction of deep cerebral hypothermia (15°C) via large-volume cold (4°C) saline aortic flush during cardiac arrest and resuscitation with cardiopulmonary bypass improves neurologic outcome in pigs. We hypothesized that induction of mild cerebral hypothermia (33°C) via smaller volume and resuscitation without bypass will improve survival and neurologic outcome after 15 minutes of cardiac arrest as compared with conventional resuscitation attempts.Basic ProceduresTwenty-four pigs (29-38 kg) underwent ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest for 15 minutes. Conventional resuscitation (n=8) was compared with hypothermic (4°C, n=8) and normothermic (38.5°C, n=8) aortic flush (30 mL/kg) at the beginning of resuscitation efforts, with defibrillation attempts 2 minutes later. Outcomes after 9 days were compared.Main FindingsIn the hypothermic flush group, brain temperature decreased from 38.3°C±0.5°C to 33°C±0.5°C within 277±112 seconds. We observed considerably higher mean coronary perfusion pressures in the normothermic and hypothermic flush groups (hypothermic vs conventional, P=.023; normothermic vs conventional, P=.041). Three animals of each flush group, compared with none of the conventional group, achieved restoration of spontaneous circulation (P=.2); and 3 pigs of the hypothermic flush group and 2 pigs of the normothermic flush group survived to 9 days without differences in neurologic outcome.Principal ConclusionA smaller volume, cold saline aortic flush during prolonged cardiac arrest rapidly induces mild cerebral hypothermia to 33°C and improves coronary perfusion pressure but does not result in a significant improvement in outcome as compared with conventional resuscitation attempts.Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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