Objectives: In-hospital cardiac arrest occurs in 2.6-6% of children with cardiac disease and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Much remains unknown about cardiac arrest in pediatric cardiac ICUs; therefore, we aimed to describe cardiac arrest epidemiology in a contemporary multicenter cardiac ICU cohort. Design: Retrospective analysis within the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium clinical registry. Setting: Cardiac ICUs within 23 North American hospitals. Patients: All cardiac medical and surgical patients admitted from August 2014 to July 2016. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results: There were 15,908 cardiac ICU encounters (6,498 medical, 9,410 surgical). 3.1% had cardiac arrest; rate was 4.8 cardiac arrest per 1,000 cardiac ICU days. Medical encounters had 50% higher rate of cardiac arrest compared with surgical encounters. Observed (unadjusted) cardiac ICU cardiac arrest prevalence varied from 1% to 5.5% among the 23 centers; cardiac arrest per 1,000 cardiac ICU days varied from 1.1 to 10.4. Over half cardiac arrest occur within 48 hours of admission. On multivariable analysis, prematurity, neonatal age, any Society of Thoracic Surgeons preoperative risk factor, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons-European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery mortality category 4, 5 had strongest association with surgical encounter cardiac arrest. In medical encounters, independent cardiac arrest risk factors were acute heart failure, prematurity, lactic acidosis greater than 3 mmol/dL, and invasive ventilation 1 hour after admission. Median cardiopulmonary resuscitation duration was 10 minutes, return of spontaneous circulation occurred in 64.5%, extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation in 27.2%. Unadjusted survival was 53.2% in encounters with cardiac arrest versus 98.2% without. Medical encounters had lower survival after cardiac arrest (37.7%) versus surgical encounters (62.5%); Norwood patients had less than half the survival after cardiac arrest (35.6%) compared with all others. Unadjusted survival after cardiac arrest varied greatly among 23 centers. Conclusions: We provide contemporary epidemiologic and outcome data for cardiac arrest occurring in the cardiac ICU from a multicenter clinical registry. As detailed above, we highlight high-risk patient cohorts and periods of time that may serve as targets for research and quality improvement initiatives aimed at cardiac arrest prevention. (C)2017The Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies
from Emergency Medicine via xlomafota13 on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2v2kz79
Εγγραφή σε:
Σχόλια ανάρτησης (Atom)
Δημοφιλείς αναρτήσεις
-
Objectives: To describe the sources of uncertainty in prognosticating devastating brain injury, the role of the intensivist in prognosticati...
-
Objective: ICU experience is linked to anxiety and depression symptomatology in family members of patients. Minors may be forbidden from vis...
-
Note: Page numbers of article titles are in boldface type. from Emergency Medicine via xlomafota13 on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2gDH2gG
-
Objectives: After traumatic brain injury, continuous electroencephalography is widely used to detect electrographic seizures. With the devel...
-
The effect of exercise on memory and BDNF signaling is dependent on intensity Abstract The aims of the present study were to investigate in ...
-
Abstract Background The treatment of the reverse oblique osteoporotic femur fractures is still problematic and can be complicated especial...
-
Objectives. To develop a differential approach to the treatment of acute psychosis induced by synthetic cannabinoids. Materials and methods...
-
Cementerio como lugares de cultura y pasado de un pueblo. El cementerio de la ciudad de Paraná "Santísima Trinidad". Un estudio de...
-
Abstract The aim of this study was to prepare an injectable DNA-loaded nano-calcium phosphate paste that is suitable as bioactive bone sub...
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου