1. Lower heart rate is associated with good one-year outcome in post-resuscitation patients.
- Author
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Oksanen T, Tiainen M, Vaahersalo J, Bendel S, Varpula T, Skrifvars M, Pettilä V, and Wilkman E
- Subjects
- Aged, Area Under Curve, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Intensive Care Units statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Recovery of Function, Single-Blind Method, Time Factors, Heart Rate, Hypothermia, Induced methods, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest mortality, Outcome Assessment, Health Care
- Abstract
Background: Optimal hemodynamic goals in post-resuscitation patients are not clear. Previous studies have reported an association between lower heart rate and good outcome in patients receiving targeted temperature management (TTM) after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest., Methods: We analyzed heart rate (HR) and outcome data of 504 post-resuscitation patients from the prospectively collected database of the FINNRESUSCI study. One-year neurologic outcome was dichotomized by the Cerebral Performance Category (CPC) to good (1-2) or poor (3-5)., Results: Of 504 patients, 40.1% (202/504) had good and 59.9% (302/ 504) had poor one-year neurologic outcome. Patients with good outcome had lower time-weighted mean HR during the first 48 h in the ICU (69.2 bpm [59.2-75.1] vs. 76.6 bpm [65.72-89.6], p < 0.001) and the first 72 h in the ICU (71.2 bpm [65.0-79.0] vs. 77.1 bpm [69.1-90.1, p < 0.001]). The percentage of HR registrations below HR threshold values (60, 80 and 100 bpm) were higher for patients with good neurologic outcome, p < 0.001 for all. Lower time-weighted HR for 0-48 h and 0-72 h, and a higher percentage of HR recordings below threshold values were independently associated with good neurological one-year outcome (p < 0.05 for all). When TTM and non-TTM patients were analyzed separately, HR parameters were independently associated with one-year neurologic outcome only in non-TTM patients., Conclusion: Lower heart rate was independently associated with good neurologic outcome. Whether HR in post-resuscitation patients is a prognostic indicator or an important variable to be targeted by treatment, needs to be assessed in future prospective controlled clinical trials., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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