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Journal ArticleDOI

Does the prognosis of cardiac arrest differ in trauma patients

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TLDR
The survival and neurologic outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest were not different between trauma and medical patients, suggesting that, under the supervision of senior physicians, active resuscitation after out- of- hospital cardiac arrest is as important in trauma as in medical patients.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: It is proposed to not resuscitate trauma patients who have a cardiac arrest outside the hospital because they are assumed to have a dismal prognosis. Our aim was to compare the outcome of patients with traumatic or nontraumatic ("medical") out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. DESIGN: Cohort analysis of patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest included in the European Epinephrine Study Group's trial comparing high vs. standard doses of epinephrine. SETTING: Nine French university hospitals. PATIENTS: A total of 2,910 patients. INTERVENTIONS: Patients were successively and randomly assigned to receive repeated high doses (5 mg each) or standard doses (1 mg each) of epinephrine at 3-min intervals. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Return of spontaneous circulation, survival to hospital admission and discharge, and secondary outcome measures of 1-yr survival and neurologic outcome were recorded. In the trauma group, patients were younger (42 +/- 17 vs. 62 +/- 17 yrs, p <.001), presented with fewer witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (62.3% vs. 79.7%), and had fewer instances of ventricular fibrillation as the first documented pulseless rhythm (3.4% [95% confidence interval, 1.2-5.5%] vs. 17.3% [15.8-18.7%]). A return of spontaneous circulation was observed in 91 of 268 trauma patients (34.0% [28.3-39.6%]) compared with 797 of 2,642 medical patients (30.2% [28.4-31.9%]), and more trauma patients survived to be admitted to the hospital (29.9% [24.4-35.3%] vs. 23.5% [22.0-25.2%]). However, there was no significant difference between trauma and medical groups at hospital discharge (2.2% [0.5-4.0%] vs. 2.8% [2.1-3.4%]) and 1-yr survival (1.9% [0.3-3.5%] vs. 2.5% [1.9-3.1%]). Among patients who were discharged, a good neurologic status was observed in two trauma patients (33.3% [4.3-77.7%]) and 37 medical patients (50% [38.1-61.9%]). CONCLUSIONS: The survival and neurologic outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest were not different between trauma and medical patients. This result suggests that, under the supervision of senior physicians, active resuscitation after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is as important in trauma as in medical patients.

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Citations
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Establishment of a swine model of traumatic cardiac arrest induced by haemorrhage and ventricular fibrillation.

TL;DR: Animals in this swine model of TCA exhibited high rates of successful resuscitation, significant vital organ injury and prolonged survival, and the model is suitable for use in further TCA research.
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Association between out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and survival in paediatric traumatic population: results from the French national registry

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Comparison of Repeated High Doses and Repeated Standard Doses of Epinephrine for Cardiac Arrest Outside the Hospital

TL;DR: A prospective, multicenter, randomized study comparing repeated high doses of epinephrine with repeated standard doses in cases of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, which showed a return of spontaneous circulation in the high-dose group.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prehospital Traumatic Cardiac Arrest: The Cost Of Futility

TL;DR: Trauma patients who require CPR at the scene or in transport die, and society should decide if the "cost of futility" is excessive, and the wisdom of transporting trauma victims suffering cardiopulmonary arrest at thescene or during transport must be questioned.
Journal ArticleDOI

Traumatic Cardiac Arrest: Who Are the Survivors?

TL;DR: The survival rates described are poor but comparable with (or better than) published survival rates for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest of any cause; patients who arrest after hypoxic insults and those who undergo out- of-hospital thoracotomy after penetrating trauma have a higher chance of survival.
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