1. Long-term evolution after in-hospital cardiac arrest in children: Prospective multicenter multinational study.
- Author
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Del Castillo J, López-Herce J, Matamoros M, Cañadas S, Rodríguez-Calvo A, Cecchetti C, Rodriguez-Núñez A, and Álvarez AC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Argentina epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Europe epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Heart Arrest mortality, Honduras epidemiology, Humans, Infant, Male, Patient Discharge trends, Prospective Studies, Survival Rate trends, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Objective: The main objective was to study survival and neurologic evolution of children who suffered in-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest (CA). The secondary objective was to analyze the influence of risk factors on the long term outcome after CA., Methods: prospective, international, observational, multicentric study in 48 hospitals of 12 countries. CA in children between 1 month and 18 years were analyzed using the Utstein template. Survival and neurological state measured by Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category (PCPC) scale one year after hospital discharge was evaluated., Results: 502 patients with in-hospital CA were evaluated. 197 of them (39.2%) survived to hospital discharge. PCPC at hospital discharge was available in 156 of survivors (79.2%). 76.9% had good neurologic state (PCPC 1-2) and 23.1% poor PCPC values (3-6). One year after cardiac arrest we could obtain data from 144 patients (28.6%). PCPC was available in 116 patients. 88 (75.9%) had a good neurologic evaluation and 28 (24.1%) a poor one. A neurological deterioration evaluated by PCPC scale was observed in 40 patients (7.9%). One year after cardiac arrest PCPC scores compared to hospital discharge had worsen in 7 patients (6%), remained constant in 103 patients (88.8%) and had improved in 6 patients (5.2%)., Conclusion: Survival one year after cardiac arrest in children after in-hospital cardiac arrest is high. Neurologic outcome of these children a year after cardiac arrest is mostly the same as after hospital discharge. The factors associated with a worst long-term neurological outcome are the etiology of arrest being a traumatic or neurologic illness, and the persistency of higher lactic acid values 24h after ROSC. A standardised basic protocol even practicable for lower developed countries would be a first step for the new multicenter studies., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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