• Intensive care medicine · Feb 1995

    Comparative Study

    No-reflow after cardiac arrest.

    • M Fischer and K A Hossmann.
    • Max-Planck-Institute for Neurological Research, Department of Experimental Neurology, Köln, Germany.
    • Intensive Care Med. 1995 Feb 1;21(2):132-41.

    ObjectiveSuccessful resuscitation of the brain requires unimpaired blood recirculation. The study addresses the question of the severity and reversibility of no-reflow after cardiac arrest.DesignAdult normothermic cats were submitted to 5, 15 and 30 min cardiac arrest by ventricular fibrillation. The extent of no-reflow was assessed in each cardiac arrest group after 5 min closed chest cardiac massage in combination with 0.2 mg/kg epinephrine or after successful resuscitation followed by 30 min recirculation.Measurements And ResultsReperfusion of the brain was visualized by labelling the circulating blood with FITC-Albumin. Areas of no-reflow, defined as absence of microvascular filling, were identified by fluorescence microscopy at 8 standard coronal levels of forebrain, and expressed as percent of total sectional area. During cardiac massage, no-reflow affected 21 +/- 5%, 42 +/- 38% and 70 +/- 27% of forebrain after 5, 15 and 30 min cardiac arrest, respectively. After 30 min spontaneous recirculation following successful resuscitation of the heart, no-reflow significantly declined to 7 +/- 11% after 5 min cardiac arrest (p < 0.05) but persisted in 30 +/- 11% and 65 +/- 21% of forebrain after 15 and 30 min cardiac arrest, respectively (n.s.).ConclusionOur observations demonstrate that resuscitation of the heart by closed chest massage causes severe (and after prolonged cardiac arrest irreversible) no-reflow of the brain. This suggests that no-reflow is an important cause of post-resuscitation brain pathology.

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