Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: in-hospital intervention strategies

Christian Hassager*, Ken Nagao, David Hildick-Smith

*Corresponding author for this work
40 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The prognosis after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has improved in the past few decades because of advances in interventions used outside and in hospital. About half of patients who have OHCA with initial ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation and who are admitted to hospital in coma after return of spontaneous circulation will survive to discharge with a reasonable neurological status. In this Series paper we discuss in-hospital management of patients with post-cardiac-arrest syndrome. In most patients, the most important in-hospital interventions other than routine intensive care are continuous active treatment (in non-comatose and comatose patients and including circulatory support in selected patients), cooling of core temperature to 32–36°C by targeted temperature management for at least 24 h, immediate coronary angiography with or without percutaneous coronary intervention, and delay of final prognosis until at least 72 h after OHCA. Prognosis should be based on clinical observations and multimodal testing, with focus on no residual sedation.

Original languageEnglish
JournalLancet
Volume391
Issue number10124
Pages (from-to)989-998
ISSN0140-6736
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

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