• Am J Emerg Med · Jan 2014

    Association between mean arterial blood gas tension and outcome in cardiac arrest patients treated with therapeutic hypothermia.

    • Byung Kook Lee, Kyung Woon Jeung, Hyoung Youn Lee, Seung Joon Lee, Yong Hun Jung, Wang Ki Lee, Tag Heo, and Yong Il Min.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Chonnam National University Hospital, Gwangju, Republic of Korea. Electronic address: bbukkuk@hanmail.net.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2014 Jan 1;32(1):55-60.

    BackgroundStudies investigating the relationship between blood gas tension and outcome in cardiac arrest survivors have reported conflicting results. This might have resulted from the use of a blood gas value at a single time point and the difference in the proportion of patients treated with therapeutic hypothermia (TH). We investigated the association of the mean blood gas tensions calculated from blood gas values obtained between restoration of spontaneous circulation and end of TH with the outcome in cardiac arrest patients treated with TH.MethodsThis was a retrospective observational study including 213 adult cardiac arrest patients. The cohort was divided into four categories based on the distribution of the mean Pao2 data using quartiles as cut-off values between categories. According to the mean Paco2, the cohort was divided into hypocarbia, normocarbia, and hypercarbia. The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality.ResultsIn multivariate analysis, the mean Pao2 quartile was not associated with in-hospital mortality, but hypocarbia was significantly associated with increased risk of in-hospital mortality (odds ratio 2.522; 95% confidence interval 1.184-5.372; P = .016). We found a V-shaped independent association between the mean Pao2 and poor neurologic outcome at hospital discharge, with the risk of poor neurologic outcome increasing with a descending and ascending Pao2 ranges.ConclusionMean Pao2 had no independent association with in-hospital mortality whereas hypocarbia was independently associated with in-hospital mortality. We also found a V-shaped independent association between the mean Pao2 and poor neurologic outcome at hospital discharge.© 2013.

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