Back to Search Start Over

Use of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Neuroprognostication After Pediatric Cardiac Arrest: Survey of Current Practices

Authors :
Juan A. Piantino
Christopher M. Ruzas
Craig A. Press
Subramanian Subramanian
Binod Balakrishnan
Ashok Panigrahy
David Pettersson
John A. Maloney
Arastoo Vossough
Alexis Topjian
Matthew P. Kirschen
Lesley Doughty
Melissa G. Chung
David Maloney
Tamara Haller
Anthony Fabio
Ericka L. Fink
Patrick Kochanek
Robert Clark
Hulya Bayir
Rachel Berger
Sue Beers
Tony Fabio
Karen Walson
Christopher J.L. Newth
Elizabeth Hunt
Jordan Duval-Arnould
Michael T. Meyer
Anthony Willyerd
Lincoln Smith
Jesse Wenger
Stuart Friess
Jose Pineda
Ashley Siems
Jason Patregnani
John Diddle
Aline Maddux
Craig Press
Juan Piantino
Pamela Rubin
Beena Desai
Maureen G. Richardson
Cynthia Bates
Darshana Parikh
Janice Prodell
Maddie Winters
Katherine Smith
Jeni Kwok
Adriana Cabrales
Ronke Adewale
Pam Melvin
Sadaf Shad
Katherine Siegel
Katherine Murkowski
Mary Kasch
Josey Hensley
Lisa Steele
Danielle Brown
Brian Burrows
Lauren Hlivka
Deana Rich
Amila Tutundzic
Tina Day
Lori Barganier
Ashley Wolfe
Mackenzie Little
Elyse Tomanio
Neha Patel
Diane Hession
Yamila Sierra
Rhonda Jones
Laura Benken
Jonathan Elmer
Srikala Narayanan
Julia Wallace
Tami Robinson
Andrew Frank
Stefan Bluml
Jessica Wisnowski
Keri Feldman
Avinash Vemulapalli
Linda Ryan
Scott Szypulski
Source :
Pediatric Neurology. 134:45-51
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a tool to aid in neuroprognostication after cardiac arrest (CA) has been described, yet details of specific indications, timing, and sequences are unknown. We aim to define the current practices in use of brain MRI in prognostication after pediatric CA.A survey was distributed to pediatric institutions participating in three international studies. Survey questions related to center demographics, clinical practice patterns of MRI after CA, neuroimaging resources, and details regarding MRI decision support.Response rate was 31% (44 of 143). Thirty-four percent (15 of 44) of centers have a clinical pathway informing the use of MRI after CA. Fifty percent (22 of 44) of respondents reported that an MRI is obtained in nearly all patients with CA, and 32% (14 of 44) obtain an MRI in those who do not return to baseline neurological status. Poor neurological examination was reported as the most common factor (91% [40 of 44]) determining the timing of the MRI. Conventional sequences (T1, T2, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery, and diffusion-weighted imaging/apparent diffusion coefficient) are routinely used at greater than 97% of centers. Use of advanced imaging techniques (magnetic resonance spectroscopy, diffusion tensor imaging, and functional MRI) were reported by less than half of centers.Conventional brain MRI is a common practice for prognostication after CA. Advanced imaging techniques are used infrequently. The lack of standardized clinical pathways and variability in reported practices support a need for higher-quality evidence regarding the indications, timing, and acquisition protocols of clinical MRI studies.

Details

ISSN :
08878994
Volume :
134
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0d7d21b1a4bd1f4eb6e28a8e6e2b9acc