25 results on '"Maciel, Carolina B."'
Search Results
2. 2023 American Heart Association Focused Update on Adult Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support: An Update to the American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care.
- Author
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Perman SM, Elmer J, Maciel CB, Uzendu A, May T, Mumma BE, Bartos JA, Rodriguez AJ, Kurz MC, Panchal AR, and Rittenberger JC
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, American Heart Association, Emergency Treatment, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Emergency Medical Services, Heart Arrest diagnosis, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Cardiac arrest is common and deadly, affecting up to 700 000 people in the United States annually. Advanced cardiac life support measures are commonly used to improve outcomes. This "2023 American Heart Association Focused Update on Adult Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support" summarizes the most recent published evidence for and recommendations on the use of medications, temperature management, percutaneous coronary angiography, extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and seizure management in this population. We discuss the lack of data in recent cardiac arrest literature that limits our ability to evaluate diversity, equity, and inclusion in this population. Last, we consider how the cardiac arrest population may make up an important pool of organ donors for those awaiting organ transplantation.
- Published
- 2024
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3. Sedation and shivering management after cardiac arrest.
- Author
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Geller BJ, Maciel CB, May TL, and Jentzer JC
- Subjects
- Humans, Shivering, Critical Care, Intensive Care Units, Heart Arrest therapy, Hypothermia, Induced
- Abstract
Management of sedation and shivering during targeted temperature management (TTM) after cardiac arrest is limited by a dearth of high-quality evidence to guide clinicians. Data from general intensive care unit (ICU) populations can likely be extrapolated to post-cardiac arrest patients, but clinicians should be mindful of key differences that exist between these populations. Most importantly, the goals of sedation after cardiac arrest are distinct from other ICU patients and may also involve suppression of shivering during TTM. Drug metabolism and clearance are altered considerably during TTM when a low goal temperature is used, which can delay accurate neuroprognostication. When neuromuscular blockade is used to prevent shivering, sedation should be deep enough to prevent awareness and providers should be aware that this can mask clinical manifestations of seizures. However, excessively deep or prolonged sedation is associated with complications including delirium, infections, increased duration of ventilatory support, prolonged ICU length of stay, and delays in neuroprognostication. In this manuscript, we review sedation and shivering management best practices in the post-cardiac arrest patient population., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: None declared., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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4. Hibernation as a path to recovery-Is waiting worth the wait? When does improvement in neurologic function happen in survivors of cardiac arrest with an early poor exam?
- Author
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Fernandez Hernandez S, Busl KM, and Maciel CB
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- Humans, Survivors, Retrospective Studies, Hibernation, Heart Arrest therapy, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Hypothermia, Induced
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
- Published
- 2023
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5. Temperature Control After Cardiac Arrest: A Narrative Review.
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Fernandez Hernandez S, Barlow B, Pertsovskaya V, and Maciel CB
- Subjects
- Humans, Temperature, Rewarming methods, Hypothermia, Induced methods, Heart Arrest complications, Heart Arrest therapy, Brain Injuries complications
- Abstract
Cardiac arrest (CA) is a critical public health issue affecting more than half a million Americans annually. The main determinant of outcome post-CA is hypoxic-ischemic brain injury (HIBI), and temperature control is currently the only evidence-based, guideline-recommended intervention targeting secondary brain injury. Temperature control is a key component of a post-CA care bundle; however, conflicting evidence challenges its wide implementation across the vastly heterogeneous population of CA survivors. Here, we critically appraise the available literature on temperature control in HIBI, detail how the evidence has been integrated into clinical practice, and highlight the complications associated with its use and the timing of neuroprognostication after CA. Future clinical trials evaluating different temperature targets, rates of rewarming, duration of cooling, and identifying which patient phenotype benefits from different temperature control methods are needed to address these prevailing knowledge gaps., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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6. Will shifting the lens let us see more clearly when prognosticating after cardiac arrest, or do we need new glasses?
- Author
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Elmashala A, Busl KM, and Maciel CB
- Subjects
- Humans, Eyeglasses, Lens, Crystalline, Heart Arrest therapy
- Published
- 2023
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7. When the heart comes back but the brain is lost-are we ready to predict brain death after cardiac arrest?
- Author
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Busl KM and Maciel CB
- Subjects
- Brain, Coma, Heart, Humans, Prognosis, Brain Death diagnosis, Heart Arrest therapy
- Published
- 2022
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8. Review of novel therapeutics in cardiac arrest (ReNTICA): systematic review protocol.
- Author
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Murphy TW, Snipes G, Chowdhury MAB, McCall-Wright P, Aleong E, Taylor N, Messina MM, Carrazana G, Maciel CB, and Becker TK
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- Humans, Meta-Analysis as Topic, Prospective Studies, Research Design, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Heart Arrest drug therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Cardiac arrest remains a common and devastating cause of death and disability worldwide. While targeted temperature management has become standard of care to improve functional neurologic outcome, few pharmacologic interventions have shown similar promise., Methods/analysis: This systematic review will focus on prospective human studies from 2015 to 2020 available in PubMed, Web of Science and EMBASE with a primary focus on impact on functional neurologic outcome. Prospective studies that include pharmacologic agents given during or after cardiac arrest will be included. Study selection will be in keeping with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. If sufficient data involving a given agent are available, a meta-analysis will be conducted and compared with current evidence for therapies recommended in international practice guidelines., Ethics and Dissemination: Formal ethical approval will not be required as primary data will not be collected. The results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publication, conference presentation and lay press., Prospero Registration Number: International Prospective Register for Systematic Reviews (CRD42021230216)., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2022
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9. Early head CT in post-cardiac arrest patients: A helpful tool or contributor to self-fulfilling prophecy?
- Author
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Beekman R, Maciel CB, Ormseth CH, Zhou SE, Galluzzo D, Miyares LC, Torres-Lopez VM, Payabvash S, Mak A, Greer DM, and Gilmore EJ
- Subjects
- Gray Matter, Humans, Prognosis, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Neuroprognostication guidelines suggest that early head computed tomography (HCT) might be useful in the evaluation of cardiac arrest (CA) patients following return of spontaneous circulation. We aimed to determine the impact of early HCT, performed within the first 6 h following CA, on decision-making following resuscitation., Methods: We identified a cohort of initially unconscious post-CA patients at a tertiary care academic medical center from 2012 to 2017. Variables pertaining to demographics, CA details, post-CA care, including neuroimaging and neurophysiologic testing, were abstracted retrospectively from the electronic medical records. Changes in management resulting from HCT findings were recorded. Blinded board-certified neurointensivists adjudicated HCT findings related to hypoxic-ischemic brain injury (HIBI) burden. The gray-white matter ratio (GWR) was also calculated., Results: Of 302 patients, 182 (60.2%) underwent HCT within six hours of CA (early HCT group). Approximately 1 in 4 early HCTs were abnormal (most commonly HIBI changes; 78.7%, n = 37), which resulted in a change in management in nearly half of cases (46.8%, n = 22). The most common changes in management were de-escalation in care [including transition to do not resuscitate status), withholding targeted temperature management, and withdrawal of life sustaining therapy (WLST)]. In cases with radiographic HIBI, mean [standard deviation] GWR was lower (1.20 [0.10] vs 1.30 [0.09], P < 0.001) and progression to brain death was higher (44.4% vs 2.9%; P < 0.001). The inter-rater reliability (IRR) of early HCT to determine presence of HIBI between radiology and three neurointensivists had a wide range (κ 0.13-0.66)., Conclusion: Early HCT identified abnormalities in 25% of cases and frequently influenced therapeutic decisions. Neuroimaging interpretation discrepancies between radiology and neurointensivists are common and agreement on severity of HIBI on early HCT is poor (k 0.11)., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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10. Neuromonitoring After Cardiac Arrest: Can Twenty-First Century Medicine Personalize Post Cardiac Arrest Care?
- Author
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Beekman R, Maciel CB, Balu R, Greer DM, and Gilmore EJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain physiopathology, Precision Medicine methods, Heart Arrest complications, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain diagnosis, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain etiology, Neurophysiological Monitoring methods
- Abstract
Cardiac arrest survivors comprise a heterogeneous population, in which the etiology of arrest, systemic and neurologic comorbidities, and sequelae of post-cardiac arrest syndrome influence the severity of secondary brain injury. The degree of secondary neurologic injury can be modifiable and is influenced by factors that alter cerebral physiology. Neuromonitoring techniques provide tools for evaluating the evolution of physiologic variables over time. This article reviews the pathophysiology of hypoxic-ischemic brain injury, provides an overview of the neuromonitoring tools available to identify risk profiles for secondary brain injury, and highlights the importance of an individualized approach to post cardiac arrest care., Competing Interests: Disclosure All authors have nothing to disclose., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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11. Physician perception of targeted temperature management after cardiac arrest: An underappreciated barrier?
- Author
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Carr CT, Mills MR, Sutchu SS, Becker TK, The Florida Cardiac Arrest Research Team, Cohen SA, Maciel CB, Adrian Tyndall J, Patel SV, Ticas D, Smith T, and Murphy TW
- Subjects
- Body Temperature, Humans, Perception, Heart Arrest therapy, Hypothermia, Induced, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Physicians
- Published
- 2020
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12. Corneal Reflex Testing in the Evaluation of a Comatose Patient: An Ode to Precise Semiology and Examination Skills.
- Author
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Maciel CB, Youn TS, Barden MM, Dhakar MB, Zhou SE, Pontes-Neto OM, Silva GS, Theriot JJ, and Greer DM
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Prognosis, Reflex, Coma diagnosis, Heart Arrest diagnosis
- Abstract
Background/objective: The corneal reflex assesses the integrity of the trigeminal and facial cranial nerves. This brainstem reflex is fundamental in neuroprognostication after cardiac arrest and in brain death determination. We sought to investigate corneal reflex testing methods among neurologists and general critical care providers in the context of neuroprognostication following cardiac arrest., Methods: This is an international cross-sectional study disseminated to members of the Neurocritical Care Society, Society of Critical Care Medicine, and American Academy of Neurology. We utilized an open Web-based survey (Qualtrics
® , Provo, UT, USA) to disseminate 26 questions regarding neuroprognostication practices following cardiac arrest, in which 3 questions pertained to corneal reflex testing. Descriptive statistical measures were used, and subgroup analyses performed between neurologists and non-neurologists. Questions were not mandatory; therefore, the percentages were relative to the number of respondents for each question., Results: There were 959 respondents in total. Physicians comprised 85.1% of practitioners (762 out of 895), of which 55% (419) identified themselves as non-neurologists and 45% (343) as neurologists. Among physicians, 85.9% (608 out of 708) deemed corneal reflex relevant for prognostication following cardiac arrest (neurologists 84.4% versus non-neurologists 87.0%). A variety of techniques were employed for corneal reflex testing, the most common being "light cotton touch" (59.2%), followed by "cotton-tipped applicator with pressure" (23.9%), "saline or water squirt" (15.9%), and "puff of air" (1.0%). There were no significant differences in the methods for testing between neurologists and non-neurologists (p = 0.52). The location of stimulus application was variable, and 26.1% of physicians (148/567) apply the stimulus on the temporal conjunctiva rather than on the cornea itself., Conclusions: Corneal reflex testing remains a cornerstone of the coma exam and is commonly used in neuroprognostication of unconscious cardiac arrest survivors and in brain death determination. A wide variability of techniques is noted among practitioners, including some that may provide suboptimal stimulation of corneal nerve endings. Imprecise testing in this setting may lead to inaccuracies in critical settings, which carries significant consequences such as guiding decisions of care limitations, misdiagnosis of brain death, and loss of public trust.- Published
- 2020
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13. Cardiac arrest: An interdisciplinary review of the literature from 2018.
- Author
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Gul SS, Cohen SA, Avery KL, Balakrishnan MP, Balu R, Chowdhury MAB, Crabb D, Huesgen KW, Hwang CW, Maciel CB, Murphy TW, Han F, and Becker TK
- Subjects
- Humans, Emergency Medical Services, Emergency Medicine, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: The Interdisciplinary Cardiac Arrest Research Review (ICARE) group was formed in 2018 to conduct a systematic annual search of peer-reviewed literature relevant to cardiac arrest (CA). The goals of the review are to illustrate best practices and help reduce knowledge silos by disseminating clinically relevant advances in the field of CA across disciplines., Methods: An electronic search of PubMed using keywords related to CA was conducted. Title and abstracts retrieved by these searches were screened for relevancy, separated by article type (original research or review), and sorted into 7 categories. Screened manuscripts underwent standardized scoring of overall methodological quality and importance. Articles scoring higher than 99 percentiles by category-type were selected for full critique. Systematic differences between editors and reviewer scores were assessed using Wilcoxon signed-rank test., Results: A total of 9119 articles were identified on initial search; of these, 1214 were scored after screening for relevance and deduplication, and 80 underwent full critique. Prognostication & Outcomes category comprised 25% and Epidemiology & Public Health 17.5% of fully reviewed articles. There were no differences between editor and reviewer scoring., Conclusions: The total number of articles demonstrates the need for an accessible source summarizing high-quality research findings to serve as a high-yield reference for clinicians and scientists seeking to absorb the ever-growing body of CA-related literature. This may promote further development of the unique and interdisciplinary field of CA medicine., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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14. Neuroprognostication Practices in Postcardiac Arrest Patients: An International Survey of Critical Care Providers.
- Author
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Maciel CB, Barden MM, Youn TS, Dhakar MB, and Greer DM
- Subjects
- Coma physiopathology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory, Guideline Adherence, Humans, Hypothermia, Induced, Male, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Prognosis, Coma diagnosis, Coma etiology, Critical Care methods, Heart Arrest complications, Neurologic Examination methods
- Abstract
Objectives: To characterize approaches to neurologic outcome prediction by practitioners who assess prognosis in unconscious cardiac arrest individuals, and assess compliance to available guidelines., Design: International cross-sectional study., Setting: We administered a web-based survey to members of Neurocritical Care Society, Society of Critical Care Medicine, and American Academy of Neurology who manage unconscious cardiac arrest patients to characterize practitioner demographics and current neuroprognostic practice patterns., Subjects: Physicians that are members of aforementioned societies who care for successfully resuscitated cardiac arrest individuals., Interventions: Not applicable., Measurements and Main Results: A total of 762 physicians from 22 countries responses were obtained. A significant proportion of respondents used absent corneal reflexes (33.5%) and absent pupillary reflexes (36.2%) at 24 hours, which is earlier than the recommended 72 hours in the standard guidelines. Certain components of the neurologic examination may be overvalued, such as absent motor response or extensor posturing, which 87% of respondents considered being very or critically important prognostic indicators. Respondents continue to rely on myoclonic status epilepticus and neuroimaging, which were favored over median nerve somatosensory evoked potentials for prognostication, although the latter has been demonstrated to have a higher predictive value. Regarding definitive recommendations based on poor neurologic prognosis, most physicians seem to wait until the postarrest timepoints proposed by current guidelines, but up to 25% use premature time windows., Conclusions: Neuroprognostic approaches to hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy vary among physicians and are often not consistent with current guidelines. The overall inconsistency in approaches and deviation from evidence-based recommendations are concerning in this disease state where mortality is so integrally related to outcome prediction.
- Published
- 2020
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15. Distinct predictive values of current neuroprognostic guidelines in post-cardiac arrest patients.
- Author
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Zhou SE, Maciel CB, Ormseth CH, Beekman R, Gilmore EJ, and Greer DM
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- Adult, Aged, Diagnostic Techniques, Neurological, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Brain Diseases etiology, Heart Arrest complications, Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Abstract
Purpose: To assess the performance of neuroprognostic guidelines proposed by the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), European Resuscitation Council/European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ERC/ESICM), and American Heart Association (AHA) in predicting outcomes of patients who remain unconscious after cardiac arrest., Methods: We retrospectively identified a cohort of unconscious post-cardiac arrest patients at a single tertiary care centre from 2011 to 2017 and reviewed hospital records for clinical, radiographic, electrophysiologic, and biochemical findings. Outcomes at discharge and 6 months post-arrest were abstracted and dichotomized as good (Cerebral Performance Category (CPC) scores of 1-2) versus poor (CPC 3-5). Outcomes predicted by current guidelines were compared to actual outcomes, with false positive rate (FPR) used as a measure of predictive value., Results: Of 226 patients, 36% survived to discharge, including 24 with good outcomes; 52% had withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies (WLST) during hospitalization. The AAN guideline yielded discharge and 6-month FPR of 8% and 15%, respectively. In contrast, the ERC/ESICM had a FPR of 0% at both discharge and 6 months. The AHA predictors had variable specificities, with diffuse hypoxic-ischaemic injury on MRI performing especially poorly (FPR 12%) at both discharge and 6 months., Conclusions: Though each guideline had components that performed well, only the ERC/ESICM guideline yielded a 0% FPR. Amongst the AAN and AHA guidelines, false positives emerged more readily at 6 months, reflective of continuing recovery after discharge, even in a cohort inevitably biased by WLST. Further assessment of predictive modalities is needed to improve neuroprognostic accuracy., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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16. Electro-clinical characteristics and prognostic significance of post anoxic myoclonus.
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Dhakar MB, Sivaraju A, Maciel CB, Youn TS, Gaspard N, Greer DM, Hirsch LJ, and Gilmore EJ
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- Aged, Electroencephalography, Female, Heart Arrest mortality, Heart Arrest therapy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Monitoring, Physiologic, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Consciousness, Heart Arrest complications, Myoclonus etiology, Wakefulness
- Abstract
Objective: To systematically examine the electro-clinical characteristics of post anoxic myoclonus (PAM) and their prognostic implications in comatose cardiac arrest (CA) survivors., Methods: Fifty-nine CA survivors who developed myoclonus within 72 h of arrest and underwent continuous EEG monitoring were included in the study. Retrospective chart review was performed for all relevant clinical variables including time of PAM onset ("early onset" when within 24 h) and semiology (multi-focal, facial/ocular, whole body and limbs only). EEG findings including background, reactivity, epileptiform patterns and EEG correlate to myoclonus were reviewed at 6, 12, 24, 48 and 72 h after the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Outcome was categorized as either with recovery of consciousness (Cerebral Performance Category (CPC) 1-3) or without recovery of consciousness (CPC 4-5) at the time of discharge., Results: Seven of the 59 patients (11.9%) regained consciousness, including 6/51 (11.8%) with early onset PAM. Patients with recovery of consciousness had shorter time to ROSC, and were more likely to have preserved brainstem reflexes and normal voltage background at all times. No patient with suppression burst or low voltage background (N = 52) at any point regained consciousness. In the subset where precise electro-clinical correlation was possible, all (5/5) those with recovery of consciousness had multi-focal myoclonus and most (4/5) had midline-maximal spikes over a continuous background. No patient with any other semiology (N = 21) regained consciousness., Conclusions: Early onset PAM is not always associated with lack of recovery of consciousness. EEG can help discriminate between patients who may or may not regain consciousness by the time of hospital discharge., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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17. Author response: Clinical Reasoning: Prognostication after cardiac arrest: What do we really know?
- Author
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Beekman R, Greer DM, Brooks DC, and Maciel CB
- Subjects
- Humans, Heart Arrest, Hypothermia, Induced
- Published
- 2018
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18. Clinical Reasoning: Prognostication after cardiac arrest: What do we really know?
- Author
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Beekman RB, Greer DM, Brooks DC, and Maciel CB
- Subjects
- Adult, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Clinical Decision-Making, Heart Arrest complications, Heart Arrest diagnosis, Heart Arrest therapy, Myoclonus diagnosis, Myoclonus etiology, Myoclonus therapy, Prognosis, Status Epilepticus diagnosis, Status Epilepticus etiology, Status Epilepticus therapy
- Published
- 2017
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19. SSEP in Therapeutic Hypothermia Era.
- Author
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Maciel CB, Morawo AO, Tsao CY, Youn TS, Labar DR, Rubens EO, and Greer DM
- Subjects
- Aged, Coma etiology, Coma therapy, Female, Humans, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain etiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Survivors, Coma diagnosis, Electroencephalography methods, Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory physiology, Heart Arrest complications, Hypothermia, Induced, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain diagnosis, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: The reliability of somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) in predicting outcome in comatose survivors of cardiac arrest treated with therapeutic hypothermia (TH) has been questioned. We investigated whether the absence of cortical (N20) responses was a reliable predictor of a nonawakening in the setting of TH., Methods: A retrospective review was conducted in cardiac arrest survivors treated with TH admitted to a single tertiary care hospital from April, 2010 to March, 2013 who underwent SSEP testing at various time points after cardiac arrest. N20 responses were categorized as normal, present but abnormal, bilaterally absent, or inadequate for interpretation. Neurologic outcome was assessed at discharge by the Cerebral Performance Category Scale (CPC)., Results: Ninety-three SSEP studies were performed in 73 patients. Fourteen patients had absent N20 responses; all had poor outcome (CPC 4-5). Eleven patients had absent N20 s during hypothermia, three of whom had follow-up SSEPs after rewarming and cortical responses remained absent. Fifty-seven patients had N20 peaks identified and had variable outcomes. Evaluation of 1 or more N20 peaks was limited or inadequate in 11.4% of SSEPs performed during the cooling because of artifact., Conclusions: Somatosensory evoked potentials remain a reliable prognostic indicator in patients undergoing TH. The limited sample size of patients who had SSEP performed during TH and repeated after normothermia added to the effect of self-fulfilling prophecy limit the interpretation of the reliability of this testing when performed during cooling. Further prospective, multicenter, large scale studies correlating cortical responses in SSEPs during and after TH are warranted. Technical challenges are commonplace during TH and caution is advised in the interpretation of suboptimal recordings.
- Published
- 2017
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20. Accurate Neuroprognostication in Cardiac Arrest Survivors: Details Matter!
- Author
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Maciel CB, Hirsch LJ, Greer DM, and Alkawadri R
- Subjects
- Humans, Survivors, Heart Arrest, Hypothermia, Induced
- Published
- 2017
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21. Cerebral Edema After Cardiac Arrest: Tell Tale Sign of Catastrophic Injury or a Treatable Complication?
- Author
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Youn TS, Maciel CB, and Greer DM
- Subjects
- Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Humans, Brain Edema, Heart Arrest
- Published
- 2016
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22. Early vigabatrin augmenting GABA-ergic pathways in post-anoxic status epilepticus (VIGAB-STAT) phase IIa clinical trial study protocol
- Author
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Maciel, Carolina B., Teixeira, Fernanda J. P., Dickinson, Katie J., Spana, Jessica C., Merck, Lisa H., Rabinstein, Alejandro A., Sergott, Robert, Shan, Guogen, Miao, Guanhong, Peloquin, Charles A., Busl, Katharina M., and Hirsch, Lawrence J.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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23. Neurologic Recovery After Cardiac Arrest: a Multifaceted Puzzle Requiring Comprehensive Coordinated Care
- Author
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Maciel, Carolina B., Barden, Mary M., and Greer, David M.
- Published
- 2017
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24. Early vigabatrin to augment GABAergic pathways in post-anoxic status epilepticus.
- Author
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Maciel, Carolina B., Ahmad, Bakhtawar, Jose Bruzzone Giraldez, Maria, Eisenschenk, Stephan, Ramsay, Eugene, Maranchick, Nicole F., Peloquin, Charles A., Hirsch, Lawrence, and Busl, Katharina M.
- Subjects
- *
STATUS epilepticus , *CARDIAC arrest , *GABA , *PSEUDOPOTENTIAL method , *BRAIN injuries - Abstract
• Outcomes in post-anoxic status epilepticus are dismal despite advances in resuscitation. • Effective therapies targeting hyperexcitability from cardiac arrest are urgently needed. • Early GABA-transaminase inhibition with vigabatrin may be an effective adjunctive therapy for PASE. • Halted GABA catabolism promotes synergistic augmentation of GABAergic pathway. The outcomes of patients who experience status epilepticus during the post-cardiac arrest period, or post-anoxic status epilepticus (PASE), remain dismal despite advances in resuscitation. The combination of therapeutic nihilism and the refractoriness of seizures in a setting where pessimistic prognostic impressions prevail is likely the main driver of such poor outcomes. The resulting pervasive vicious cycle perpetuates this knowledge gap, whereby hypoxic-ischemic insults as the etiology for seizures remain a ubiquitous exclusion criterion for clinal trials in status epilepticus. Effective therapies targeting hyperexcitability resulting from hypoxic-ischemic brain injury are urgently needed. Early inhibition of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) transaminase with vigabatrin holds potential as an effective adjunctive therapy for PASE. This scientific premise is based on the resulting halted GABA catabolism thereby promoting synergistic augmentation of GABAergic pathway when used in combination with positive GABAergic allosteric modulators. This paper is based on a lecture presented at the 9th London-Innsbruck Colloquium on Status Epilepticus and Acute Seizures, in London 8–10 April 2024. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. Public perception towards bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
- Author
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Becker, Torben K., Gul, Sarah S., Cohen, Scott A., Maciel, Carolina B., Baron-Lee, Jacqueline, Murphy, Travis W., Youn, Teddy S., Tyndall, Joseph A., Gibbons, Clay, Hart, Lizzy, Alviar, Carlos L., and Florida Cardiac Arrest Resource Team
- Abstract
Objective: Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) improves survival and neurological outcomes. Nonetheless, many OHCA patients do not receive bystander CPR during a witnessed arrest. Our aim was to identify potential barriers to bystander CPR.Methods: Participants at CPR training events conducted in the USA between February and May 2018 answered a 14-question survey prior to training. Respondents were asked about their overall comfort level performing CPR, and about potential concerns specific to performing CPR on a middle-aged female, a geriatric male, and male and female adolescent patients. Open-ended responses were analysed qualitatively by categorising responses into themes.Results: Of the 677 participants, 582 (86.0%) completed the survey, with 509 (88.1%) between 18 and 29 years of age, 341 (58.6%) without prior CPR training and 556 (96.0%) without prior CPR experience. Across all four scenarios of patients in cardiac arrest, less than 65% of respondents reported that they would be 'Extremely Likely' (20.6%-29.1%) or 'Moderately Likely' (26.9%-34.8%) to initiate CPR. The leading concerns were 'causing injury to patient' for geriatric (n=193, 63.1%), female (n=51, 20.5%) and adolescent (n=148, 50.9%) patients. Lack of appropriate skills was the second leading concern when the victim was a geriatric (n=41, 13.4%) or adolescent (n=68, 23.4%) patient, whereas for female patients, 35 (14.1%) were concerned about exposing the patient or the patient's breasts interfering with performance of CPR and 15 (6.0%) were concerned about being accused of sexual assault. Significant differences were observed in race, ethnicity and age regarding the likelihood of starting to perform CPR on female and adolescent patients.Conclusions: Participants at CPR training events have multiple concerns and fears related to performing bystander CPR. Causing additional harm and lack of skills were among the leading reservations reported. These findings should be considered for improved CPR training and public education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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