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Phenotyping cardiac arrest: bench and bedside characterization of brain and heart injury based on etiology
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- OBJECTIVES Cardiac arrest etiology may be an important source of between-patient heterogeneity, but the impact of etiology on organ injury is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that asphyxial cardiac arrest results in greater neurologic injury than cardiac etiology cardiac arrest (ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest), whereas ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest results in greater cardiovascular dysfunction after return of spontaneous circulation. DESIGN Prospective observational human and randomized animal study. SETTING University laboratory and ICUs. PATIENTS Five-hundred forty-three cardiac arrest patients admitted to ICU. SUBJECTS Seventy-five male Sprague-Dawley rats. INTERVENTIONS We examined neurologic and cardiovascular injury in Isoflurane-anesthetized rat cardiac arrest models matched by ischemic time. Hemodynamic and neurologic outcomes were assessed after 5 minutes no flow asphyxial cardiac arrest or ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest. Comparison was made to injury patterns observed after human asphyxial cardiac arrest or ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS In rats, cardiac output (20 ± 10 vs 45 ± 9 mL/min) and pH were lower and lactate higher (9.5 ± 1.0 vs 6.4 ± 1.3 mmol/L) after return of spontaneous circulation from ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest versus asphyxial cardiac arrest (all p < 0.01). Asphyxial cardiac arrest resulted in greater early neurologic deficits, 7-day neuronal loss, and reduced freezing time (memory) after conditioned fear (all p < 0.05). Brain antioxidant reserves were more depleted following asphyxial cardiac arrest. In adjusted analyses, human ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest was associated with greater cardiovascular injury based on peak troponin (7.8 ng/mL [0.8-57 ng/mL] vs 0.3 ng/mL [0.0-1.5 ng/mL]) and ejection fraction by echocardiography (20% vs 55%; all p < 0.0001), whereas asphyxial cardiac arrest was associated with worse early neurologic injury and poor functional outcome at hospital discharge (n = 46 [18%] vs 102 [44%]; p < 0.0001). Most ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest deaths (54%) were the result of cardiovascular instability, whereas most asphyxial cardiac arrest deaths (75%) resulted from neurologic injury (p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS In transcending rat and human studies, we find a consistent phenotype of heart and brain injury after cardiac arrest based on etiology: ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest produces worse cardiovascular dysfunction, whereas asphyxial cardiac arrest produces worsened neurologic injury associated with greater oxidative stress.
- Subjects :
- Male
Cardiac output
medicine.medical_specialty
Heart Injury
Hemodynamics
030204 cardiovascular system & hematology
Return of spontaneous circulation
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Article
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
03 medical and health sciences
Asphyxia
0302 clinical medicine
Internal medicine
medicine
Animals
Humans
Prospective Studies
Ejection fraction
biology
business.industry
Myocardium
Brain
030208 emergency & critical care medicine
medicine.disease
Troponin
Heart Arrest
Rats
Disease Models, Animal
Phenotype
Ventricular fibrillation
Ventricular Fibrillation
cardiovascular system
Cardiology
biology.protein
Cardiovascular Injury
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....deb4f482571e899c70e301a87e5a7ff0