Resuscitation
-
Review Meta Analysis
Acute coronary angiography in patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest--a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest has a poor prognosis. The main aetiology is ischaemic heart disease. ⋯ No randomised studies exist on acute coronary angiography following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. An increasing number of observational studies support feasibility and a possible survival benefit of an early invasive approach. In patients without an obvious non-cardiac aetiology, acute coronary angiography should be strongly considered irrespective of electrocardiographic findings due to a high prevalence of coronary artery disease.
-
Review Meta Analysis Comparative Study
The effect of hyperoxia following cardiac arrest - A systematic review and meta-analysis of animal trials.
There are conflicting findings from observational studies regarding the nature of the association between hyperoxia and risk of mortality in patients admitted to intensive care following cardiac arrest. This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluates animal data investigating the effect of administration of high concentrations of oxygen following cardiac arrest on neurological outcome and the clinical applicability of this data. ⋯ The administration of 100% oxygen therapy is associated with worse neurological outcome than lower oxygen concentrations in animal models of cardiac arrest. However, due to limitations in study design and poor generalisability of the animal models to the situation of post cardiac arrest resuscitation in humans, the clinical applicability of this data is uncertain.
-
Review Meta Analysis
Therapeutic hypothermia and prevention of acute kidney injury: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
Therapeutic hypothermia has been shown to reduce neurological morbidity and mortality in the setting of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and may be beneficial following brain injury and cardiopulmonary bypass. We conducted a systematic review to ascertain the effect of therapeutic hypothermia on development of acute kidney injury (AKI) and mortality. ⋯ In trials that ascertained kidney endpoints, therapeutic hypothermia prevented neither the development of AKI nor dialysis requirement, but was associated with lower mortality. Different definitions and rates of AKI, differences in mortality rates, and concerns about the optimal target cooling temperature preclude definitive conclusions.
-
The benefit of therapeutic hypothermia (TH) for comatose adult patients with return of spontaneous circulation after cardiac arrest (CA) with non-shockable initial rhythms is uncertain. We evaluated whether TH reduces mortality and improves neurological outcome in comatose adults resuscitated from non-shockable CA. ⋯ TH is associated with reduced in-hospital mortality for adults patients resuscitated from non-shockable CA. However, most of the studies had substantial risks of bias and quality of evidence was very low. Further high quality randomized clinical trials would confirm the actual benefit of TH in this population.
-
Review Meta Analysis
Vasopressin for cardiac arrest: meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
Prior meta-analyses-reported results of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) published between 1997 and 2004 failed to show any vasopressin-related benefit in cardiac arrest. Based on new RCT-data and a hypothesis of a potentially increased vasoconstricting efficacy of vasopressin, we sought to determine whether the cumulative, current evidence supports or refutes an overall and/or selective benefit for vasopressin regarding sustained restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), long-term survival, and neurological outcome. ⋯ Vasopressin use in the resuscitation of cardiac arrest patients is not associated with any overall benefit or harm. However, vasopressin may improve the long-term survival of asystolic patients, especially when average T(DRUG) is <20 min.