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Comparison of out of hospital cardiac arrest due to acute brain injury vs other causes - 09/12/21

Doi : 10.1016/j.ajem.2021.10.045 
Peiman Nazerian a, Giuliano De Stefano a, , Enrico Lumini a, Paolo Fucini a, Andrea Nencioni a, Barbara Paladini a, Chiara Lazzeri b, Adriano Peris b, Stefano Grifoni a
a Department of Emergency Medicine, Careggi University Hospital, Firenze, Italy 
b Intensive Care Unit and Regional ECMO Referral Center, Careggi University Hospital, Firenze, Italy 

Corresponding author at: Department of Emergency Medicine, Careggi University Hospital, Largo Brambilla 3, 50134 Florence, Italy.Department of Emergency MedicineCareggi University HospitalLargo Brambilla 3Florence50134Italy

Abstract

Background

Acute brain injury (ABI) can cause out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). The aim of this study was to compare clinical features, mortality and potential for organ donation in patients with OHCA due to ABI vs other causes.

Methods

From January 2017 to December 2018, all adult patients presenting to ED for OHCA were considered for the study. Two physicians established the definitive cause of OHCA, according to clinical, laboratory, diagnostic imaging and autoptic findings. Clinical features in patients with OHCA due to ABI or other causes were compared.

Results

280 patients were included in the analysis. ABI was the third most frequent cause of OHCA (21, 7.5%); ABIs were 8 subarachnoid hemorrhage, 8 intracerebral hemorrhage, 2 ischemic stroke, 2 traumatic spinal cord injury and 1 status epilepticus respectively. Neurological prodromes such as seizure, headache and focal neurological signs were significantly more frequent in patients with OHCA due to ABI (OR 5.34, p = 0.03; OR 12.90, p = 0.02; and OR 66.53, p < 0.01 respectively) while among non-neurological prodromes chest pain and dyspnea were significantly more frequent in patients with OHCA due to other causes (OR 14.5, p < 0.01; and OR 10.4, p = 0.02 respectively). Anisocoria was present in 19% of patients with OHCA due to ABI vs 2.7% due to other causes (OR 8.47, p < 0.01). In 90.5% of patients with ABI and in 53.1% of patients with other causes the first cardiac rhythm was non shockable (OR 8.1; p = 0.05). Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that older age, active smoking, post-traumatic OHCA, neurological prodromes, anisocoria at pupillary examination were independently associated with OHCA due to ABI. Patients with ABI showed a higher mortality compared with the other causes group (19 pts., 90.5% versus 167 pts., 64.5%; p = 0.015). Potential organ donors were more frequent among ABI than other causes group (10 pts., 47.6% vs 75 pts., 28.9%) however the difference did not reach the statistical significance (p = 0.07).

Conclusions

ABI is the third cause of OHCA. Neurological prodromes, absence of chest pain and dyspnea before cardiac arrest, anisocoria and initial non-shockable rhythm might suggest a neurological etiology of the cardiac arrest. Patients with OHCA due to ABI has an unfavorable outcome, however, they could be candidate to organ donation.

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Keywords : Acute brain injury, Cardiac arrest, Subarachnoid hemorrhage, Intracerebral hemorrhage


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Vol 51

P. 304-307 - Gennaio 2022 Ritorno al numero
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