255 results on '"Morgan RW"'
Search Results
2. Estrogen Profiles in Young Women: Effect of Maternal History of Breast Cancer2
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J. B. Brown, Elinson L, Vakil Dv, and Morgan Rw
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Gynecology ,Cancer Research ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pregnancy ,medicine.drug_class ,Population ,Cancer ,Physiology ,Estriol ,Estrone ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Breast cancer ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Estrogen ,medicine ,Family history ,education ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
To examine the hypothesis that familial breast cancer risk is related to estrogen metabolism, we analyzed urines of daughters of breast cancer patients and their matched controls for estrone (E1), estradiol (E2), and estriol (E3). From this, we computed estriol proportions (E3/E1 + E2 + E3). "Patient-daughters" and the matched controls showed no differences in estriol proportions. Our results failed to support the hypothesis that high-risk women (those with a family history of breast cancer) have relatively lower estriol proportions, and we concluded that whatever family history contributes to breast cancer risk, that risk is not likely to be transmitted by the estrogen profile.
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- 1978
3. AGE AT MENARCHE, PROBABILITY OF OVULATION AND BREAST-CANCER RISK
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MACMAHON, B TRICHOPOULOS, D BROWN, J ANDERSEN, AP AOKI, K COLE, P DEWAARD, F KAURANIEMI, T MORGAN, RW PURDE, M RAVNIHAR, B STORMBY, N WESTLUND, K WOO, NC
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- 1982
4. Fetal loss and work in a waste water treatment plant... paternal exposure.
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Morgan RW, Kheifets L, Obrinsky DL, Whorton MD, and Foliart DE
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- 1984
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5. Exchange curves for fixing batch quantities
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Girling, AJ, primary and Morgan, RW, additional
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- 1973
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6. Skin Cancer after PUVA Treatment for Psoriasis
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Morgan Rw
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,business.industry ,Puva treatment ,MEDLINE ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,Photochemotherapy ,Psoriasis ,medicine ,Humans ,Methoxsalen ,Ultraviolet Therapy ,Skin cancer ,business - Published
- 1979
7. Resuscitation arterial waveform quantification and outcomes in pediatric bidirectional Glenn and Fontan patients.
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Yates AR, Hehir DA, Reeder RW, Berger JT, Fernandez R, Frazier AH, Graham K, McQuillen PS, Morgan RW, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Palmer CA, Wolfe HA, Berg RA, and Sutton RM
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Background: Resuscitation with chest compressions and positive pressure ventilation in Bidirectional Glenn (BDG) or Fontan physiology may compromise passive venous return and accentuate neurologic injury. We hypothesized that arterial pressure and survival would be better in BDG than Fontan patients., Methods: Secondary analyses of the Pediatric Intensive Care Quality of CPR and Improving Outcomes from Pediatric Cardiac Arrest databases. P-values were considered significant if < 0.05., Results: In total, 64 patients had either BDG (42/64, 66%) or Fontan (22/64, 34%) anatomy. Return of spontaneous circulation was achieved in 76% of BDG patients versus 59% of Fontan patients and survival with favorable neurologic outcome in 22/42 (52%) BDG versus 6/22 (27%) Fontan patients, p = 0.067. Twelve of 24 (50%) BDG and 2/7 (29%) Fontan patients who survived to discharge suffered new morbidity as defined by worsening Functional Status Score. More BDG patients achieved adequate DBP (≥25 mmHg for neonates and infants; ≥ 30 mmHg for children) than Fontan patients (21/23 (91%) vs. 5/11 (46%), p = 0.007)., Conclusions: Only 27% of Fontan patients survived to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome after CPR, likely driven by inadequate diastolic blood pressure during resuscitation. One half of the BDG patients who survived to hospital discharge had new neurologic morbidity., Background: Cardiac arrest in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) may present challenges to resuscitation based on the unique cardiovascular physiology resulting from surgical palliation. Recent resuscitation guidelines for CHD patients highlight the lack of data surrounding these special patient populations.
1 Univentricular heart disease is palliated by a series of cardiac surgeries that stepwise result in passive pulmonary perfusion from the systemic venous system directly to the pulmonary vascular bed. The bidirectional Glenn (BDG) palliation directly anastomoses the superior vena cava (SVC) to the pulmonary arterial system and leaves normal inferior vena cava (IVC) venous return to the heart.2 The Fontan palliation baffles IVC flow directly to the pulmonary vascular bed which relieves cyanosis due to right to left shunting, but requires systemic ventricular preload to be directly dependent upon pulmonary vascular resistance and intrathoracic pressures.3 IMPACT STATEMENT: Hemodynamic waveforms from 2 large prospective observational studies now allow for exploration of physiology during cardiopulmonary resuscitation for unique anatomy associated with single ventricle congenital heart disease. Fewer patients with Fontan physiology (46%) achieved an adequate diastolic blood pressure (defined as ≥ 25 mmHg for neonates and infants and ≥ 30 mmHg for children) than bidirectional Glenn patients during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (91%, p = 0.007). Only 27% of Fontan patients survived to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome after cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Of the bidirectional Glenn patients who survived, 50% developed a new morbidity as quantified by the Functional Status Score., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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8. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation employing only abdominal compressions in infants after cardiac surgery: A secondary sub-analysis of the ICU-RESUS study.
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Fernandez RP, McConnell PI, Reeder RW, Alvey JS, Berg RA, Meert KL, Morgan RW, Nadkarni VM, Wolfe HA, Sutton RM, and Yates AR
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Importance: Patients with underlying cardiac disease form a considerable proportion of pediatric patients who experience in-hospital cardiac arrest. In pediatric patients after cardiac surgery, CPR with abdominal compressions alone (AC-CPR) may provide an alternative to standard chest compression CPR (S-CPR) with additional procedural and physiologic advantages., Objective: Quantitatively describe hemodynamics during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and outcomes of infants who received only abdominal compressions (AC-CPR)., Design: This is a sub-group analysis of the prospective, observational cohort from the ICU-RESUS trial NCT028374497., Setting & Patients: A single site quaternary care pediatric cardiothoracic intensive care unit enrolled in the ICU-RESUS trial. Patients less than 1 year of age with congenital heart disease who required compressions during cardiac arrest., Interventions: Use of AC-CPR during cardiac arrest resuscitation., Measurements and Main Results: Invasive arterial line waveforms during CPR were analyzed for 11 patients (10 surgical cardiac and 1 medical cardiac). Median weight was 3.3 kg [IQR 3.0, 4.0]; and median duration of CPR was 5.0 [3.0, 20.0] minutes. Systolic (median 57 [IQR 48, 65] mmHg) and diastolic (median 32 [IQR 24, 43] mmHg) blood pressures were achieved with a median rate of 114 [IQR 100, 124] compressions per minute. Return of spontaneous circulation was obtained in 9 of 11 (82%) patients; 2 patients (18%) were cannulated for extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) and 6 (55%) survived to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome., Conclusions: AC-CPR may offer an alternative method to maintain perfusion for infants who experience cardiac arrest. This may have particular benefit in pediatric patients after cardiac surgery for whom external chest compressions may be harmful due to anatomic and physiologic considerations., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Richard P. Fernandez, MD reports financial support, administrative support, and statistical analysis were provided by National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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9. No to iNO? Not so fast.
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Herrmann JR, Morgan RW, and Berg RA
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- Humans, Nitric Oxide, Heart Arrest therapy
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Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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- 2024
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10. Association of Postarrest Hypotension Burden With Unfavorable Neurologic Outcome After Pediatric Cardiac Arrest.
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Liu R, Majumdar T, Gardner MM, Burnett R, Graham K, Beaulieu F, Sutton RM, Nadkarni VM, Berg RA, Morgan RW, Topjian AA, and Kirschen MP
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- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Child, Preschool, Child, Infant, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric statistics & numerical data, Arterial Pressure physiology, Adolescent, Hypotension epidemiology, Hypotension etiology, Heart Arrest therapy, Heart Arrest complications
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Objective: Quantify hypotension burden using high-resolution continuous arterial blood pressure (ABP) data and determine its association with outcome after pediatric cardiac arrest., Design: Retrospective observational study., Setting: Academic PICU., Patients: Children 18 years old or younger admitted with in-of-hospital or out-of-hospital cardiac arrest who had invasive ABP monitoring during postcardiac arrest care., Interventions: None., Measurements and Main Results: High-resolution continuous ABP was analyzed up to 24 hours after the return of circulation (ROC). Hypotension burden was the time-normalized integral area between mean arterial pressure (MAP) and fifth percentile MAP for age. The primary outcome was unfavorable neurologic status (pediatric cerebral performance category ≥ 3 with change from baseline) at hospital discharge. Mann-Whitney U tests compared hypotension burden, duration, and magnitude between favorable and unfavorable patients. Multivariable logistic regression determined the association of unfavorable outcomes with hypotension burden, duration, and magnitude at various percentile thresholds from the 5th through 50th percentile for age. Of 140 patients (median age 53 [interquartile range 11-146] mo, 61% male); 63% had unfavorable outcomes. Monitoring duration was 21 (7-24) hours. Using a MAP threshold at the fifth percentile for age, the median hypotension burden was 0.01 (0-0.11) mm Hg-hours per hour, greater for patients with unfavorable compared with favorable outcomes (0 [0-0.02] vs. 0.02 [0-0.27] mm Hg-hr per hour, p < 0.001). Hypotension duration and magnitude were greater for unfavorable compared with favorable patients (0.03 [0-0.77] vs. 0.71 [0-5.01]%, p = 0.003; and 0.16 [0-1.99] vs. 2 [0-4.02] mm Hg, p = 0.001). On logistic regression, a 1-point increase in hypotension burden below the fifth percentile for age (equivalent to 1 mm Hg-hr of burden per hour of recording) was associated with increased odds of unfavorable outcome (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 14.8; 95% CI, 1.1-200; p = 0.040). At MAP thresholds of 10th-50th percentiles for age, MAP burden below the threshold was greater in unfavorable compared with favorable patients in a dose-dependent manner., Conclusions: High-resolution continuous ABP data can be used to quantify hypotension burden after pediatric cardiac arrest. The burden, duration, and magnitude of hypotension are associated with unfavorable neurologic outcomes., Competing Interests: Dr. Nadkarni is the president of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) 2023. This work is not intended to reflect the views of SCCM. Dr. Morgan receives research support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) (K23HL148541). Dr. Kirschen receives research support from the NIH to his institution (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke K23NS116120), Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Resuscitation Science Center. Mr. Burnett disclosed work for hire. Dr. Sutton’s institution received funding from the NHLBI. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
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- 2024
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11. Epinephrine Dosing Intervals Are Associated With Pediatric In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Outcomes: A Multicenter Study.
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Kienzle MF, Morgan RW, Reeder RW, Ahmed T, Berg RA, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Cooper KK, Diddle JW, Federman M, Fernandez R, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Frizzola M, Graham K, Hall M, Horvat C, Huard LL, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Meert KL, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Pollack MM, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Tabbutt S, Viteri S, Wolfe HA, and Sutton RM
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- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Infant, Child, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric, Time Factors, Drug Administration Schedule, Vasoconstrictor Agents administration & dosage, Vasoconstrictor Agents therapeutic use, Infant, Newborn, Adolescent, Epinephrine administration & dosage, Epinephrine therapeutic use, Heart Arrest therapy, Heart Arrest mortality, Heart Arrest drug therapy, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods
- Abstract
Objectives: Data to support epinephrine dosing intervals during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) are conflicting. The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between epinephrine dosing intervals and outcomes. We hypothesized that dosing intervals less than 3 minutes would be associated with improved neurologic survival compared with greater than or equal to 3 minutes., Design: This study is a secondary analysis of The ICU-RESUScitation Project (NCT028374497), a multicenter trial of a quality improvement bundle of physiology-directed CPR training and post-cardiac arrest debriefing., Setting: Eighteen PICUs and pediatric cardiac ICUs in the United States., Patients: Subjects were 18 years young or younger and 37 weeks old or older corrected gestational age who had an index cardiac arrest. Patients who received less than two doses of epinephrine, received extracorporeal CPR, or had dosing intervals greater than 8 minutes were excluded., Interventions: The primary exposure was an epinephrine dosing interval of less than 3 vs. greater than or equal to 3 minutes., Measurements and Main Results: The primary outcome was survival to discharge with a favorable neurologic outcome defined as a Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category score of 1-2 or no change from baseline. Regression models evaluated the association between dosing intervals and: 1) survival outcomes and 2) CPR duration. Among 382 patients meeting inclusion and exclusion criteria, median age was 0.9 years (interquartile range 0.3-7.6 yr) and 45% were female. After adjustment for confounders, dosing intervals less than 3 minutes were not associated with survival with favorable neurologic outcome (adjusted relative risk [aRR], 1.10; 95% CI, 0.84-1.46; p = 0.48) but were associated with improved sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) (aRR, 1.21; 95% CI, 1.07-1.37; p < 0.01) and shorter CPR duration (adjusted effect estimate, -9.5 min; 95% CI, -14.4 to -4.84 min; p < 0.01)., Conclusions: In patients receiving at least two doses of epinephrine, dosing intervals less than 3 minutes were not associated with neurologic outcome but were associated with sustained ROSC and shorter CPR duration., Competing Interests: Drs. Kienzle, Berg, Morgan, Reeder, Carcillo, Carpenter, Hall, Horvat, Franzon, Frazier, Friess, Maa, Manga, McQuillen, Meert, Mourani, Naim, Pollack, Sapru, Schnieter, Wolfe, and Sutton received National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant funding to their institution related to this project. Dr. Kienzle disclosed the study was supported by the NIH Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD; U01HD049934, UG1HD049981, UG1HD049983, UG1HD050096, UG1HD063108, UG1HD083166, UG1HD083170, and UG1HD083171) and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI; R01HL131544 and K23HL148541) and by the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Research Institute Resuscitation Science Center. Dr. Berg reports membership on Data Safety Monitoring Boards. Dr. Carcillo received funding from the NICHD and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. Dr. Diddle received funding from Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Friess received funding for expert testimony. Drs. Berg’s and Maa’s institutions received funding from the NHLBI. Drs. Berg, Carpenter, Horvat, and McQuillen institutions received funding from the NICHD. Drs. Morgan and Sutton report volunteer leadership roles with the American Heart Association. Dr. Morgan’s institution received funding from the NHLBI (K23HL148541). Dr. Hall received funding from the American Board of Pediatrics, AbbVie, Kiadis, Partner Therapeutics, and Sobi. Dr. Nadkarni receives unrestricted research grants to his institution from the NIH, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Department of Defense, Zoll Medical, Nihon Kohden, Resuscitation Quality Improvement Partners, American Heart Association, and Laerdal Foundation. He serves as the president of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM). The views expressed are his, and not intended to represent the views of the SCCM. Dr. Wolfe received funding for speaking fees. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
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- 2024
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12. Brief report: incidence and outcomes of pediatric tracheal intubation-associated cardiac arrests in the ICU-RESUS clinical trial.
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Nishisaki A, Reeder RW, McGovern EL, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Diddle W, Federman M, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Hehir DA, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen P, Meert KL, Morgan RW, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Notterman D, Palmer CA, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Viteri S, Wessel D, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Zuppa AF, Sutton RM, and Berg RA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Infant, Child, Incidence, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation statistics & numerical data, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation adverse effects, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric statistics & numerical data, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric organization & administration, Adolescent, Intubation, Intratracheal statistics & numerical data, Intubation, Intratracheal adverse effects, Intubation, Intratracheal methods, Heart Arrest therapy, Heart Arrest mortality, Heart Arrest epidemiology
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Background: Tracheal intubation (TI)-associated cardiac arrest (TI-CA) occurs in 1.7% of pediatric ICU TIs. Our objective was to evaluate resuscitation characteristics and outcomes between cardiac arrest patients with and without TI-CA., Methods: Secondary analysis of cardiac arrest patients in both ICU-RESUS trial and ancillary CPR-NOVA study. The primary exposure was TI-CA, defined as cardiac arrest occurred during TI procedure or within 20 min after endotracheal tube placement. The primary outcome was survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurological outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category score 1-3 or unchanged)., Results: Among 315 children with cardiac arrests, 48 (15.2%) met criteria for TI-CA. Pre-existing medical conditions were similar between groups. Pre-arrest non-invasive mechanical ventilation was more common among TI-CA patients (18/48, 37.5%) compared to non-TI-CA patients (35/267, 13.1%). In 48% (23/48), the TI-CA occurred within 20 min after intubation (i.e., not during intubation). Duration of CPR was longer in TI-CA patients (median 11.0 min, interquartile range [IQR]: 2.5, 35.5) than non-TI-CA patients (median 5.0 min, IQR 2.0, 21.0), p = 0.03. Return of spontaneous circulation occurred in 32/48 (66.7%) TI-CA versus 186/267 (69.7%) non-TI-CA, p = 0.73. Survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurological outcome occurred in 29/48 (60.4%) TI-CA versus 146/267 (54.7%) non-TI-CA, p = 0.53., Conclusions: Fifteen percent of these pediatric ICU cardiac arrests were associated with TI. Half of TI-CA occurred after endotracheal tube placement. While duration of CPR was longer in TI-CA patients, there were no differences in unadjusted outcomes following TI-CA versus non-TI-CA., Trial Registration: The ICU-RESUS (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02837497)., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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13. Association of EEG characteristics with outcomes following pediatric ICU cardiac arrest: A secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUScitation trial.
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Mazzio EL, Topjian AA, Reeder RW, Sutton RM, Morgan RW, Berg RA, Nadkarni VM, Wolfe HA, Graham K, Naim MY, Friess SH, Abend NS, and Press CA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Child, Prospective Studies, Infant, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric statistics & numerical data, Prognosis, Electroencephalography methods, Heart Arrest therapy, Heart Arrest mortality, Heart Arrest physiopathology, Heart Arrest complications, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods
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Background and Objectives: There are limited tools available following cardiac arrest to prognosticate neurologic outcomes. Prior retrospective and single center studies have demonstrated early EEG features are associated with neurologic outcome. This study aimed to evaluate the prognostic value of EEG for pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) in a prospective, multicenter study., Methods: This cohort study is a secondary analysis of the ICU-Resuscitation trial, a multicenter randomized interventional trial conducted at 18 pediatric and pediatric cardiac ICUs in the United States. Patients who achieved return of circulation (ROC) and had post-ROC EEG monitoring were eligible for inclusion. Patients < 90 days old and those with pre-arrest Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category (PCPC) scores > 3 were excluded. EEG features of interest included EEG Background Category, and presence of focal abnormalities, sleep spindles, variability, reactivity, periodic and rhythmic patterns, and seizures. The primary outcome was survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome. Associations between EEG features and outcomes were assessed with multivariable logistic regression. Prediction models with and without EEG Background Category were developed and receiver operator characteristic curves compared., Results: Of the 1129 patients with an index cardiac arrest who achieved ROC in the parent study, 261 had EEG within 24 h of ROC, of which 151 were evaluable. The cohort included 57% males with a median age of 1.1 years (IQR 0.4, 6.8). EEG features including EEG Background Category, sleep spindles, variability, and reactivity were associated with survival with favorable outcome and survival, (all p < 0.001). The addition of EEG Background Category to clinical models including age category, illness category, PRISM score, duration of CPR, first documented rhythm, highest early post-arrest arterial lactate improved the prediction accuracy achieving an AUROC of 0.84 (CI 0.77-0.92), compared to AUROC of 0.76 (CI 0.67-0.85) (p = 0.005) without EEG Background Category., Conclusion: This multicenter study demonstrates the value of EEG, in the first 24 h following ROC, for predicting survival with favorable outcome after a pediatric IHCA., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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14. Elevated serum neurologic biomarker profiles after cardiac arrest in a porcine model.
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Senthil K, Ranganathan A, Piel S, Hefti MM, Reeder RW, Kirschen MP, Starr J, Morton S, Gaudio HA, Slovis JC, Herrmann JR, Berg RA, Kilbaugh TJ, and Morgan RW
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Introduction: Swine exhibit cerebral cortex mitochondrial dysfunction and neuropathologic injury after hypoxic cardiac arrest treated with hemodynamic-directed CPR (HD-CPR) despite normal Cerebral Performance Category scores. We analyzed the temporal evolution of plasma protein biomarkers of brain injury and inflammatory cytokines, as well as cerebral cortical mitochondrial injury and neuropathology for five days following pediatric asphyxia-associated cardiac arrest treated with HD-CPR., Methods: One-month-old swine underwent asphyxia associated cardiac arrest, 10-20 min of HD-CPR (goal SBP 90 mmHg, coronary perfusion pressure 20 mmHg), and randomization to post-ROSC survival duration (24, 48, 72, 96, 120 h; n = 3 per group) with standardized post-resuscitation care. Plasma neurofilament light chain (NfL), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), and cytokine levels were collected pre-injury and 1, 6, 24, 48, 72, 96, and 120 h post-ROSC. Cerebral cortical tissue was assessed for: mitochondrial respirometry, mass, and dynamic proteins; oxidative injury; and neuropathology., Results: Relative to pre-arrest baseline (9.4 pg/ml [6.7-12.6]), plasma NfL was increased at all post-ROSC time points. Each sequential NfL measurement through 48 h was greater than the previous value {1 h (12.7 pg/ml [8.4-14.6], p = 0.01), 6 h (30.9 pg/ml [17.7-44.0], p = 0.0004), 24 h (59.4 pg/ml [50.8-96.1], p = 0.0003) and 48 h (85.7 pg/ml [61.9-118.7], p = 0.046)}. Plasma GFAP, inflammatory cytokines or cerebral cortical tissue measurements were not demonstrably different between time points., Conclusions: In a swine model of pediatric cardiac arrest, plasma NfL had an upward trajectory until 48 h post-ROSC after which it remained elevated through five days, suggesting it may be a sensitive marker of neurologic injury following pediatric cardiac arrest., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Dr. Julia Slovis currently works for GalaxoSmithKline, but her employment began after completion of her contribution to this manuscript., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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15. Early bolus epinephrine administration during pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation for bradycardia with poor perfusion: an ICU-resuscitation study.
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O'Halloran AJ, Reeder RW, Berg RA, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Dean JM, Diddle JW, Federman M, Fernandez R, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Hehir DA, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Kienzle MF, Kilbaugh TJ, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Meert KL, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Notterman D, Pollack MM, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Tilford B, Topjian AA, Viteri S, Wessel D, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Zuppa AF, Sutton RM, and Morgan RW
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Child, Infant, Adolescent, Intensive Care Units statistics & numerical data, Intensive Care Units organization & administration, Epinephrine administration & dosage, Epinephrine therapeutic use, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation statistics & numerical data, Bradycardia drug therapy, Bradycardia therapy
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Background: Half of pediatric in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) events have an initial rhythm of non-pulseless bradycardia with poor perfusion. Our study objectives were to leverage granular data from the ICU-RESUScitation (ICU-RESUS) trial to: (1) determine the association of early epinephrine administration with survival outcomes in children receiving CPR for bradycardia with poor perfusion; and (2) describe the incidence and time course of the development of pulselessness., Methods: Prespecified secondary analysis of ICU-RESUS, a multicenter cluster randomized trial of children (< 19 years) receiving CPR in 18 intensive care units in the United States. Index events (October 2016-March 2021) lasting ≥ 2 min with a documented initial rhythm of bradycardia with poor perfusion were included. Associations between early epinephrine (first 2 min of CPR) and outcomes were evaluated with Poisson multivariable regression controlling for a priori pre-arrest characteristics. Among patients with arterial lines, intra-arrest blood pressure waveforms were reviewed to determine presence of a pulse during CPR interruptions. The temporal nature of progression to pulselessness was described and outcomes were compared between patients according to subsequent pulselessness status., Results: Of 452 eligible subjects, 322 (71%) received early epinephrine. The early epinephrine group had higher pre-arrest severity of illness and vasoactive-inotrope scores. Early epinephrine was not associated with survival to discharge (aRR 0.97, 95%CI 0.82, 1.14) or survival with favorable neurologic outcome (aRR 0.99, 95%CI 0.82, 1.18). Among 186 patients with invasive blood pressure waveforms, 118 (63%) had at least 1 period of pulselessness during the first 10 min of CPR; 86 (46%) by 2 min and 100 (54%) by 3 min. Sustained return of spontaneous circulation was highest after bradycardia with poor perfusion (84%) compared to bradycardia with poor perfusion progressing to pulselessness (43%) and bradycardia with poor perfusion progressing to pulselessness followed by return to bradycardia with poor perfusion (62%) (p < 0.001)., Conclusions: In this cohort of pediatric CPR events with an initial rhythm of bradycardia with poor perfusion, we failed to identify an association between early bolus epinephrine and outcomes when controlling for illness severity. Most children receiving CPR for bradycardia with poor perfusion developed subsequent pulselessness, 46% within 2 min of CPR onset., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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16. Examining associations between disordered eating and harmful substance use in a nationally representative sample of US veterans.
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Chen Y, Christensen Pacella KA, Forbush KT, Thomeczek ML, Negi S, Doan AE, Wendler AM, Morgan RW, Rasheed SI, Johnson-Munguia S, and Sharma AR
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, United States epidemiology, Longitudinal Studies, Middle Aged, Sex Factors, Veterans psychology, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Feeding and Eating Disorders epidemiology, Feeding and Eating Disorders psychology
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Objective: The association between eating disorders (EDs) and harmful substance use (substance use that causes psychosocial impairment) is well recognized in the literature, and military veterans may be at heightened risk for both issues due to deployment-related stressors. However, little is known about which ED-related symptoms are associated with harmful substance use in veterans, and whether gender plays a differential role in this relationship. Our aims were to: (1) examine gender differences in ED-related symptoms; and (2) examine whether ED-related symptoms differentially predict harmful substance use in US veteran men and women who had recently separated from service., Method: This study was based on a nationally representative four-wave longitudinal sample of post-9/11 veterans (N = 835; 61.2% female). Longitudinal mixed modeling was used to test whether specific ED-related behaviors at baseline predicted harmful substance use at follow-ups., Results: We replicated gendered patterns of ED-related symptoms observed in civilian populations, wherein men had higher weight-and-body-related concerns (including excessive exercise and muscle building) and negative attitude toward obesity, and women had higher bulimic and restricting symptoms. For women, alcohol, drug, and marijuana problems were predicted by higher bulimic symptoms, whereas for men, these problems were predicted by higher restricting symptoms., Conclusion: Gender played a differential role in the relationship between EDs and harmful substance use. Bulimic symptoms were the most robust predictor for harmful substance use among veteran women, whereas restricting was the most robust predictor for harmful substance use among veteran men., Public Significance: The current study found that veteran women had higher bulimic symptoms (characterized by binge eating and purging) and restricting than veteran men. In women, bulimic symptoms predicted future harmful use of alcohol, marijuana, and other drugs. In contrast, veteran men had higher weight-and-body-related concerns (characterized by excessive exercise and muscle building) than veteran women. In men, restricting symptoms predicted future harmful use of alcohol, marijuana, and other drugs., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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17. Characteristics of Pediatric In-Hospital Cardiac Arrests and Resuscitation Duration.
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O'Halloran A, Morgan RW, Kennedy K, Berg RA, Gathers CA, Naim MY, Nadkarni V, Reeder R, Topjian A, Wolfe H, Kleinman M, Chan PS, and Sutton RM
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- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Child, Preschool, Child, Infant, Time Factors, Adolescent, Registries, Infant, Newborn, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation statistics & numerical data, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Heart Arrest therapy, Heart Arrest mortality
- Abstract
Importance: Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) duration is associated with cardiac arrest survival., Objectives: To describe characteristics associated with CPR duration among hospitalized children without return of circulation (ROC) (patient-level analysis) and determine whether hospital median CPR duration in patients without ROC is associated with survival (hospital-level analysis)., Design, Setting, and Participants: This retrospective cohort study of patients undergoing pediatric in-hospital CPR between January 1, 2000, and December 31, 2021, used data from the Get With the Guidelines-Resuscitation registry. Children receiving chest compressions for at least 2 minutes and/or defibrillation were included in the patient-level analysis. For the hospital-level analysis, sites with at least 20 total events and at least 5 events without ROC were included. Data were analyzed from December 1, 2022, to November 15, 2023., Exposures: For the patient-level analysis, the exposure was CPR duration in patients without ROC. For the hospital-level analysis, the exposure was quartile of median CPR duration in events without ROC at each hospital., Main Outcomes and Measures: For the patient-level analysis, outcomes were patient and event factors, including race and ethnicity and event location; we used a multivariable hierarchical linear regression model to assess factors associated with CPR duration in patients without ROC. For the hospital-level analysis, the main outcome was survival to discharge among all site events; we used a random intercept multivariable hierarchical logistic regression model to examine the association between hospital quartile of CPR duration and survival to discharge., Results: Of 13 899 events, 3859 patients did not have ROC (median age, 7 months [IQR, 0 months to 7 years]; 2175 boys [56%]). Among event nonsurvivors, median CPR duration was longer in those with initial rhythms of bradycardia with poor perfusion (8.37 [95% CI, 5.70-11.03] minutes; P < .001), pulseless electrical activity (8.22 [95% CI, 5.44-11.00] minutes; P < .001), and pulseless ventricular tachycardia (6.17 [95% CI, 0.09-12.26] minutes; P = .047) (vs asystole). Shorter median CPR duration was associated with neonates compared with older children (-4.86 [95% CI, -8.88 to -0.84] minutes; P = .02), emergency department compared with pediatric intensive car7 e unit location (-4.02 [95% CI, -7.48 to -0.57] minutes; P = .02), and members of racial or ethnic minority groups compared with White patients (-3.67 [95% CI, -6.18 to -1.17]; P = .004). Among all CPR events, the adjusted odds of survival to discharge differed based on hospital quartile of median CPR duration among events without ROC; compared with quartile 1 (15.0-25.9 minutes), the adjusted odds ratio for quartile 2 (26.0-29.4 minutes) was 1.22 (95% CI, 1.09-1.36; P < .001); for quartile 3 (29.5-32.9 minutes), 1.23 (95% CI, 1.08-1.39; P = .002); and for quartile 4 (33.0-53.0 minutes), 1.04 (95% CI, 0.91-1.19; P = .58)., Conclusions and Relevance: In this retrospective cohort study of pediatric in-hospital CPR, several factors, including age and event location, were associated with CPR duration in event nonsurvivors. The odds of survival to discharge were lower for patients at hospitals with the shortest and longest median CPR durations among events without ROC. Further studies are needed to determine the optimal duration of CPR during pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest and to provide training guidelines for resuscitation teams to eliminate disparities in resuscitation care.
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- 2024
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18. Effect of dimethyl fumarate on mitochondrial metabolism in a pediatric porcine model of asphyxia-induced in-hospital cardiac arrest.
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Piel S, McManus MJ, Heye KN, Beaulieu F, Fazelinia H, Janowska JI, MacTurk B, Starr J, Gaudio H, Patel N, Hefti MM, Smalley ME, Hook JN, Kohli NV, Bruton J, Hallowell T, Delso N, Roberts A, Lin Y, Ehinger JK, Karlsson M, Berg RA, Morgan RW, and Kilbaugh TJ
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- Animals, Swine, Brain metabolism, Brain drug effects, Brain pathology, Humans, Myocardium metabolism, Myocardium pathology, Oxidative Phosphorylation drug effects, Heart Arrest metabolism, Heart Arrest drug therapy, Asphyxia metabolism, Asphyxia drug therapy, Asphyxia complications, Disease Models, Animal, Dimethyl Fumarate pharmacology, Dimethyl Fumarate therapeutic use, Mitochondria metabolism, Mitochondria drug effects
- Abstract
Neurological and cardiac injuries are significant contributors to morbidity and mortality following pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA). Preservation of mitochondrial function may be critical for reducing these injuries. Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) has shown potential to enhance mitochondrial content and reduce oxidative damage. To investigate the efficacy of DMF in mitigating mitochondrial injury in a pediatric porcine model of IHCA, toddler-aged piglets were subjected to asphyxia-induced CA, followed by ventricular fibrillation, high-quality cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and random assignment to receive either DMF (30 mg/kg) or placebo for four days. Sham animals underwent similar anesthesia protocols without CA. After four days, tissues were analyzed for mitochondrial markers. In the brain, untreated CA animals exhibited a reduced expression of proteins of the oxidative phosphorylation system (CI, CIV, CV) and decreased mitochondrial respiration (p < 0.001). Despite alterations in mitochondrial content and morphology in the myocardium, as assessed per transmission electron microscopy, mitochondrial function was unchanged. DMF treatment counteracted 25% of the proteomic changes induced by CA in the brain, and preserved mitochondrial structure in the myocardium. DMF demonstrates a potential therapeutic benefit in preserving mitochondrial integrity following asphyxia-induced IHCA. Further investigation is warranted to fully elucidate DMF's protective mechanisms and optimize its therapeutic application in post-arrest care., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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19. Association of Pediatric Postcardiac Arrest Ventilation and Oxygenation with Survival Outcomes.
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Frazier AH, Topjian AA, Reeder RW, Morgan RW, Fink EL, Franzon D, Graham K, Harding ML, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Wolfe HA, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Diddle JW, Federman M, Friess SH, Hall M, Hehir DA, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Maa T, Meert KL, Naim MY, Notterman D, Pollack MM, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Viteri S, Wessel D, Yates AR, Sutton RM, and Berg RA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Prospective Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Infant, Hypocapnia, Hyperoxia mortality, Adolescent, Oxygen blood, Survival Rate, Infant, Newborn, Respiration, Artificial, Heart Arrest therapy, Heart Arrest mortality, Hypoxia mortality, Hypercapnia mortality, Hypercapnia therapy, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods
- Abstract
Rationale: Adult and pediatric studies provide conflicting data regarding whether post-cardiac arrest hypoxemia, hyperoxemia, hypercapnia, and/or hypocapnia are associated with worse outcomes. Objectives: We sought to determine whether postarrest hypoxemia or postarrest hyperoxemia is associated with lower rates of survival to hospital discharge, compared with postarrest normoxemia, and whether postarrest hypocapnia or hypercapnia is associated with lower rates of survival, compared with postarrest normocapnia. Methods: An embedded prospective observational study during a multicenter interventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation trial was conducted from 2016 to 2021. Patients ⩽18 years old and with a corrected gestational age of ≥37 weeks who received chest compressions for cardiac arrest in one of the 18 intensive care units were included. Exposures during the first 24 hours postarrest were hypoxemia, hyperoxemia, or normoxemia-defined as lowest arterial oxygen tension/pressure (Pa
O ) <60 mm Hg, highest Pa2 O ⩾200 mm Hg, or every Pa2 O 60-199 mm Hg, respectively-and hypocapnia, hypercapnia, or normocapnia, defined as lowest arterial carbon dioxide tension/pressure (Pa2 CO ) <30 mm Hg, highest Pa2 CO ⩾50 mm Hg, or every Pa2 CO 30-49 mm Hg, respectively. Associations of oxygenation and carbon dioxide group with survival to hospital discharge were assessed using Poisson regression with robust error estimates. Results: The hypoxemia group was less likely to survive to hospital discharge, compared with the normoxemia group (adjusted relative risk [aRR] = 0.71; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.58-0.87), whereas survival in the hyperoxemia group did not differ from that in the normoxemia group (aRR = 1.0; 95% CI = 0.87-1.15). The hypercapnia group was less likely to survive to hospital discharge, compared with the normocapnia group (aRR = 0.74; 95% CI = 0.64-0.84), whereas survival in the hypocapnia group did not differ from that in the normocapnia group (aRR = 0.91; 95% CI = 0.74-1.12). Conclusions: Postarrest hypoxemia and hypercapnia were each associated with lower rates of survival to hospital discharge.2 - Published
- 2024
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20. Carbon monoxide as a cellular protective agent in a swine model of cardiac arrest protocol.
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Greenwood JC, Morgan RW, Abella BS, Shofer FS, Baker WB, Lewis A, Ko TS, Forti RM, Yodh AG, Kao SH, Shin SS, Kilbaugh TJ, and Jang DH
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- Animals, Swine, Heart Arrest therapy, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Male, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Disease Models, Animal, Carbon Monoxide pharmacology, Carbon Monoxide metabolism
- Abstract
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) affects over 360,000 adults in the United States each year with a 50-80% mortality prior to reaching medical care. Despite aggressive supportive care and targeted temperature management (TTM), half of adults do not live to hospital discharge and nearly one-third of survivors have significant neurologic injury. The current treatment approach following cardiac arrest resuscitation consists primarily of supportive care and possible TTM. While these current treatments are commonly used, mortality remains high, and survivors often develop lasting neurologic and cardiac sequela well after resuscitation. Hence, there is a critical need for further therapeutic development of adjunctive therapies. While select therapeutics have been experimentally investigated, one promising agent that has shown benefit is CO. While CO has traditionally been thought of as a cellular poison, there is both experimental and clinical evidence that demonstrate benefit and safety in ischemia with lower doses related to improved cardiac/neurologic outcomes. While CO is well known for its poisonous effects, CO is a generated physiologically in cells through the breakdown of heme oxygenase (HO) enzymes and has potent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities. While CO has been studied in myocardial infarction itself, the role of CO in cardiac arrest and post-arrest care as a therapeutic is less defined. Currently, the standard of care for post-arrest patients consists primarily of supportive care and TTM. Despite current standard of care, the neurological prognosis following cardiac arrest and return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) remains poor with patients often left with severe disability due to brain injury primarily affecting the cortex and hippocampus. Thus, investigations of novel therapies to mitigate post-arrest injury are clearly warranted. The primary objective of this proposed study is to combine our expertise in swine models of CO and cardiac arrest for future investigations on the cellular protective effects of low dose CO. We will combine our innovative multi-modal diagnostic platform to assess cerebral metabolism and changes in mitochondrial function in swine that undergo cardiac arrest with therapeutic application of CO., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Greenwood et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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21. Noninvasive Positive Pressure Ventilation Use and In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest in Bronchiolitis.
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Shepard LN, Mehta S, Graham K, Kienzle M, O'Halloran A, Yehya N, Morgan RW, and Keim GP
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Infant, Female, Male, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric statistics & numerical data, Noninvasive Ventilation, Child, Preschool, Positive-Pressure Respiration methods, Positive-Pressure Respiration statistics & numerical data, Cohort Studies, Bronchiolitis therapy, Bronchiolitis epidemiology, Bronchiolitis complications, Heart Arrest therapy, Heart Arrest mortality, Heart Arrest epidemiology, Heart Arrest etiology
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Importance: A recent study showed an association between high hospital-level noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) use and in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) in children with bronchiolitis., Objectives: We aimed to determine if patient-level exposure to NIPPV in children with bronchiolitis was associated with IHCA., Design, Setting and Participants: Retrospective cohort study at a single-center quaternary PICU in North America including children with International Classification of Diseases primary or secondary diagnoses of bronchiolitis in the Virtual Pediatric Systems database., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary exposure was NIPPV and the primary outcome was IHCA., Measurements and Main Results: Of 4698 eligible ICU admissions with bronchiolitis diagnoses, IHCA occurred in 1.2% (57/4698). At IHCA onset, invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) was the most frequent level of respiratory support (65%, 37/57), with 12% (7/57) receiving NIPPV. Patients with IHCA had higher Pediatric Risk of Mortality-III scores (3 [0-8] vs. 0 [0-2]; p < 0.001), more frequently had a complex chronic condition (94.7% vs. 46.2%; p < 0.001), and had higher mortality (21.1% vs. 1.0%; p < 0.001) compared with patients without IHCA. Return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) was achieved in 93% (53/57) of IHCAs; 79% (45/57) survived to hospital discharge. All seven children without chronic medical conditions and with active bronchiolitis symptoms at the time of IHCA achieved ROSC, and 86% (6/7) survived to discharge. In multivariable analysis restricted to patients receiving NIPPV or IMV, NIPPV exposure was associated with lower odds of IHCA (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 0.07; 95% CI, 0.03-0.18) compared with IMV. In secondary analysis evaluating categorical respiratory support in all patients, compared with IMV, NIPPV was associated with lower odds of IHCA (aOR, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.14-0.87), whereas no difference was found for minimal respiratory support (none/nasal cannula/humidified high-flow nasal cannula [aOR, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.23-1.36])., Conclusions and Relevance: Cardiac arrest in children with bronchiolitis is uncommon, occurring in 1.2% of bronchiolitis ICU admissions. NIPPV use in children with bronchiolitis was associated with lower odds of IHCA., Competing Interests: Dr. Shepard’s participation in this project was supported by the Pediatric Hospital Epidemiology and Outcomes Research Training program, the National Institutes of Health, and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development-funded postdoctoral fellowship (T32 HD060550). The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.)
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- 2024
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22. Association Between Chest Compression Pause Duration and Survival After Pediatric In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest.
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Lauridsen KG, Morgan RW, Berg RA, Niles DE, Kleinman ME, Zhang X, Griffis H, Del Castillo J, Skellett S, Lasa JJ, Raymond TT, Sutton RM, and Nadkarni VM
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- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Child, Preschool, Time Factors, Infant, Treatment Outcome, Adolescent, Heart Arrest mortality, Heart Arrest therapy, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation mortality
- Abstract
Background: The association between chest compression (CC) pause duration and pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest survival outcomes is unknown. The American Heart Association has recommended minimizing pauses in CC in children to <10 seconds, without supportive evidence. We hypothesized that longer maximum CC pause durations are associated with worse survival and neurological outcomes., Methods: In this cohort study of index pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrests reported in pediRES-Q (Quality of Pediatric Resuscitation in a Multicenter Collaborative) from July of 2015 through December of 2021, we analyzed the association in 5-second increments of the longest CC pause duration for each event with survival and favorable neurological outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category ≤3 or no change from baseline). Secondary exposures included having any pause >10 seconds or >20 seconds and number of pauses >10 seconds and >20 seconds per 2 minutes., Results: We identified 562 index in-hospital cardiac arrests (median [Q1, Q3] age 2.9 years [0.6, 10.0], 43% female, 13% shockable rhythm). Median length of the longest CC pause for each event was 29.8 seconds (11.5, 63.1). After adjustment for confounders, each 5-second increment in the longest CC pause duration was associated with a 3% lower relative risk of survival with favorable neurological outcome (adjusted risk ratio, 0.97 [95% CI, 0.95-0.99]; P =0.02). Longest CC pause duration was also associated with survival to hospital discharge (adjusted risk ratio, 0.98 [95% CI, 0.96-0.99]; P =0.01) and return of spontaneous circulation (adjusted risk ratio, 0.93 [95% CI, 0.91-0.94]; P <0.001). Secondary outcomes of any pause >10 seconds or >20 seconds and number of CC pauses >10 seconds and >20 seconds were each significantly associated with adjusted risk ratio of return of spontaneous circulation, but not survival or neurological outcomes., Conclusions: Each 5-second increment in longest CC pause duration during pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest was associated with lower chance of survival with favorable neurological outcome, survival to hospital discharge, and return of spontaneous circulation. Any CC pause >10 seconds or >20 seconds and number of pauses >10 seconds and >20 seconds were significantly associated with lower adjusted probability of return of spontaneous circulation, but not survival or neurological outcomes., Competing Interests: Disclosures Dr Lauridsen received funding from the AP Møller Foundation and EliteForsk from the Danish Ministry for Higher Education and Research. Dr Nadkarni received unrestricted research funding to his institution from the National Institutes of Health, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Zoll Medical, and Nihon-Kohden Inc, and volunteers on scientific advisory committees for the American Heart Association, Citizen CPR Foundation, INSPIRE simulation research network, and Citizen CPR Foundation. Dr Nadkarni is president of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (2023–2024). The views presented in this article reflect his views as an individual and are not intended to represent the opinions of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. D.E. Niles was an employee of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia at the time of data collection and analysis and is currently an employee of Philips Medical. Dr Morgan receives funding from the National Institutes of Health career development award from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (award K23HL148541). Dr Raymond receives compensation as an adjudicator for the Pediatric Heart Network COMPASS trial from New England Research Institutes, Inc.
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- 2024
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23. Admission Functional Status is Associated With Intensivists Perception of Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Candidacy for Pediatric Acute Respiratory Failure.
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McCabe BC, Morrison WE, Morgan RW, and Himebauch AS
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- Child, Humans, Prospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Functional Status, Perception, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation, Respiratory Insufficiency therapy, Respiratory Distress Syndrome
- Abstract
Objectives: To determine the association between admission Functional Status Scale (FSS) category and perceived extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) candidacy for pediatric acute respiratory failure., Design: Prospective, cross-sectional study., Setting: Single-center, quaternary, and ECMO referral academic children's hospital between March 2021 and January 2022., Subjects: Pediatric intensivists directly caring for patients admitted with acute respiratory failure secondary to shock or respiratory disease., Interventions: None., Measurements and Main Results: Pediatric intensivists were surveyed about current patients within 72 hours of initiation or escalation of invasive mechanical ventilation on whether they would offer ECMO should their patient deteriorate. Baseline functional status was assessed using trichotomized admission FSS: 1) normal/mild dysfunction (6-9), 2) moderate dysfunction (10-15), and 3) severe dysfunction (> 16). Multivariable logistic regression clustered by physician was used to assess the association between admission FSS category with perceived ECMO candidacy. Thirty-seven intensivists participated with 76% (137/180) of survey responses by those with less than 10 years of experience. 81% of patients (146/180) were perceived as ECMO candidates and 19% of patients (34/180) were noncandidates. Noncandidates had worse admission FSS scores than candidates (15.5 vs. 9, p < 0.001). After adjustment for age, admission FSS category of severe dysfunction had lower odds of perceived ECMO candidacy compared with normal to mild dysfunction (odds ratio [OR] 0.18 [95% CI, 0.06-0.56], p < 0.003). Patients with an abnormal communication subscore domain had the lowest odds of being considered a candidate (unadjusted OR 0.44 [95% CI, 0.29-0.68], p < 0.0001)., Conclusions: In this prospective, single-center, cross-sectional study, admission FSS category indicating worse baseline functional status impacted pediatric intensivists' perceptions of ECMO candidacy for patients with acute respiratory failure. Abnormal FSS subscores in the neurocognitive domains were the most important considerations. Future studies should better seek to define the decision-making priorities of both parents and medical specialists for the utilization of ECMO in children with acute respiratory failure., Competing Interests: Drs. Morgan and Himebauch received support for article research from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Morgan’s institution received funding from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) (K23HL148531). Dr. Himebauch’s institution received funding from the NHLBI (5K23-HL153759). The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.)
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- 2024
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24. Understanding community provider practices in diagnosing and treating atypical anorexia nervosa: A mixed methods study.
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Johnson-Munguia S, Bottera AR, Vanzhula I, Forbush KT, Gould SR, Negi S, Thomeczek ML, L'Insalata AM, Like EE, Sharma AR, Morgan RW, and Rasheed S
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- Humans, Female, Male, Weight Loss, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Anorexia Nervosa diagnosis, Anorexia Nervosa therapy, Anorexia Nervosa psychology
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Objective: There is a lack of consensus in defining "significant weight loss" when diagnosing atypical anorexia nervosa (atypical AN) and no guidelines exist for setting target weight (TW). The current study aimed to identify community providers' practices related to the diagnosis of atypical AN and the determination of TW. A secondary aim was to evaluate whether professional discipline impacted "significant weight loss" definitions., Method: A variety of providers (N = 141; 96.4% female) completed an online survey pertaining to diagnostic and treatment practices with atypical AN. Descriptive statistics were computed to characterize provider-based practices and Fisher's exact tests were used to test for differences in diagnostic practices by professional discipline. Thematic analysis was used to examine open-ended questions., Results: Most (63.97%) providers diagnosed atypical AN in the absence of any weight loss if other AN criteria were met, but doctoral-level psychologists and medical professionals were less likely to do so compared to nutritional or other mental health professionals. Most providers found weight gain was only sometimes necessary for atypical AN recovery. Qualitative responses revealed providers found atypical AN to be a stigmatizing label that was not taken seriously. Providers preferred to use an individualized approach focused on behaviors, rather than weight when diagnosing and treating atypical AN., Discussion: Lack of diagnostic clarity and concrete treatment guidelines for atypical AN may result in substantial deviations from the DSM-5-TR criteria in real-world practice. Clinically useful diagnostic definitions for restrictive eating disorders and evidence-based treatment guidelines for TW and/or other relevant recovery metrics are needed., Public Significance: The current study found variability in how community providers diagnose and determine target recovery weight for atypical anorexia nervosa (atypical AN). Many providers viewed the diagnosis of atypical AN as stigmatizing and preferred to focus on behaviors, rather than weight. This study underscores the importance of creating a clinically useful diagnostic definition and guidelines for recovery for atypical AN backed by empirical evidence that providers may implement in practice., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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25. Outcomes of Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation for In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Among Children With Noncardiac Illness Categories.
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Loaec M, Himebauch AS, Reeder R, Alvey JS, Race JA, Su L, Lasa JJ, Slovis JC, Raymond TT, Coleman R, Barney BJ, Kilbaugh TJ, Topjian AA, Sutton RM, and Morgan RW
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- Child, Humans, Infant, Bayes Theorem, Cohort Studies, Hospitals, Propensity Score, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Child, Preschool, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation, Heart Arrest therapy
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Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine the association of the use of extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) with survival to hospital discharge in pediatric patients with a noncardiac illness category. A secondary objective was to report on trends in ECPR usage in this population for 20 years., Design: Retrospective multicenter cohort study., Setting: Hospitals contributing data to the American Heart Association's Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation registry between 2000 and 2021., Patients: Children (<18 yr) with noncardiac illness category who received greater than or equal to 30 minutes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) for in-hospital cardiac arrest., Interventions: None., Measurements and Main Results: Propensity score weighting balanced ECPR and conventional CPR (CCPR) groups on hospital and patient characteristics. Multivariable logistic regression incorporating these scores tested the association of ECPR with survival to discharge. A Bayesian logistic regression model estimated the probability of a positive effect from ECPR. A secondary analysis explored temporal trends in ECPR utilization. Of 875 patients, 159 received ECPR and 716 received CCPR. The median age was 1.0 [interquartile range: 0.2-7.0] year. Most patients (597/875; 68%) had a primary diagnosis of respiratory insufficiency. Median CPR duration was 45 [35-63] minutes. ECPR use increased over time ( p < 0.001). We did not identify differences in survival to discharge between the ECPR group (21.4%) and the CCPR group (16.2%) in univariable analysis ( p = 0.13) or propensity-weighted multivariable logistic regression (adjusted odds ratio 1.42 [95% CI, 0.84-2.40; p = 0.19]). The Bayesian model estimated an 85.1% posterior probability of a positive effect of ECPR on survival to discharge., Conclusions: ECPR usage increased substantially for the last 20 years. We failed to identify a significant association between ECPR and survival to hospital discharge, although a post hoc Bayesian analysis suggested a survival benefit (85% posterior probability)., Competing Interests: The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
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- 2024
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26. Early Cardiac Arrest Hemodynamics, End-Tidal C o2 , and Outcome in Pediatric Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: Secondary Analysis of the ICU-RESUScitation Project Dataset (2016-2021).
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Yates AR, Naim MY, Reeder RW, Ahmed T, Banks RK, Bell MJ, Berg RA, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Dean JM, Diddle JW, Federman M, Fernandez R, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Hehir DA, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Morgan RW, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Notterman D, Pollack MM, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Tilford B, Viteri S, Wessel D, Wolfe HA, Yeh J, Zuppa AF, Sutton RM, and Meert KL
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- Infant, Child, Humans, Carbon Dioxide, Hemodynamics, Intensive Care Units, Retrospective Studies, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Cannulation for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation during active extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) is a method to rescue patients refractory to standard resuscitation. We hypothesized that early arrest hemodynamics and end-tidal C o2 (ET co2 ) are associated with survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome in pediatric ECPR patients., Design: Preplanned, secondary analysis of pediatric Utstein, hemodynamic, and ventilatory data in ECPR patients collected during the 2016-2021 Improving Outcomes from Pediatric Cardiac Arrest study; the ICU-RESUScitation Project (ICU-RESUS; NCT02837497)., Setting: Eighteen ICUs participated in ICU-RESUS., Patients: There were 97 ECPR patients with hemodynamic waveforms during cardiopulmonary resuscitation., Interventions: None., Measurements and Main Results: Overall, 71 of 97 patients (73%) were younger than 1 year old, 82 of 97 (85%) had congenital heart disease, and 62 of 97 (64%) were postoperative cardiac surgical patients. Forty of 97 patients (41%) survived with favorable neurologic outcome. We failed to find differences in diastolic or systolic blood pressure, proportion achieving age-based target diastolic or systolic blood pressure, or chest compression rate during the initial 10 minutes of CPR between patients who survived with favorable neurologic outcome and those who did not. Thirty-five patients had ET co2 data; of 17 survivors with favorable neurologic outcome, four of 17 (24%) had an average ET co2 less than 10 mm Hg and two (12%) had a maximum ET co2 less than 10 mm Hg during the initial 10 minutes of resuscitation., Conclusions: We did not identify an association between early hemodynamics achieved by high-quality CPR and survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome after pediatric ECPR. Candidates for ECPR with ET co2 less than 10 mm Hg may survive with favorable neurologic outcome., Competing Interests: Drs. Yates’s, Naim’s, Reeder’s, Berg’s, Carpenter’s, Dean’s, Fink’s, Frazier’s, Hall’s, Manga’s, Mourani’s, Sapru’s, Wessel’s, Wolfe’s, Zuppa’s, and Meert’s institution received funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Drs. Yates, Naim, Reeder, Banks, Berg, Carcillo, Carpenter, Dean, Fink, Franzon, Frazier, Freiss, Hall, Horvat, McQuillen, Mourani, Pollack, Sapru, Schneiter, Wessel, Zuppa, Sutton, and Meert received support for article research from the NIH. Drs. Banks’s, Carcillo’s, Horvat’s, Maa’s, McQuillen’s, Pollack’s, and Schneiter’s institutions received funding from the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development. Dr. Banks disclosed government work. Drs. Carcillo’s, Maa’s, and Sutton’s institutions received funding from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI). Dr. Carcillo’s institution received funding from the National Institute for General Medical Sciences. Dr. Diddle disclosed that he is a consultant with Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Franzon received funding from Health Navigator Foundation; she disclosed that she is a site investigator for a multisite NIH funded project. Dr. Frazier’s institution received funding from the Neurocritical Care Society and the American Board of Pediatrics. Dr. Hall received funding from AbbVie, Kiadis, and the American Board of Pediatrics. Dr. Morgan’s institution received funding from the NHLBI (K23HL148541). Dr. Wolfe received funding from The Debriefing Academy. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.)
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- 2024
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27. Wolf Creek XVII Part 6: Physiology-Guided CPR.
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Bray J, Rea T, Parnia S, Morgan RW, Wik L, and Sutton R
- Abstract
Introduction: Physiology-guided cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) offers the potential to optimize resuscitation and enable early prognosis., Methods: Physiology-Guided CPR was one of six focus topic for the Wolf Creek XVII Conference held on June 14-17, 2023 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. International thought leaders and scientists in the field of cardiac arrest resuscitation from academia and industry were invited. Participants submitted via online survey knowledge gaps, barriers to translation and research priorities for each focus topic. Expert panels used the survey results and their own perspectives and insights to create and present a preliminary unranked list for each category, which was then debated, revised and ranked by all attendees to identify the top 5 for each category., Results: Top knowledge gaps include identifying optimal strategies for the evaluation of physiology-guided CPR and the optimal values for existing patients using patient outcomes. The main barriers to translation are the limited usability outside of critical care environments and the training and equipment required for monitoring. The top research priorities are the development of clinically feasible and reliable methods to continuously and non-invasively monitor physiology during CPR and prospective human studies proving targeting parameters during CPR improves outcomes., Conclusion: Physiology-guided CPR has the potential to provide individualized resuscitation and move away from a one-size-fits-all approach. Current understanding is limited, and clinical trials are lacking. Future developments need to consider the clinical application and applicability of measurement to all healthcare settings. Therefore, clinical trials using physiology-guided CPR for individualisation of resuscitation efforts are needed., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Janet Bray is an Associate Editor of Resuscitation Plus. Lars Wik is a medical advisor to Stryker Emergency Care and holds patents through his Hospital licenced to Stryker and Zoll., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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28. Hyperkalemic Cardiac Arrest: Challenging Classical Therapies With Translational Science.
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Herrmann JR and Morgan RW
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- Humans, Translational Science, Biomedical, Heart Arrest therapy, Hyperkalemia
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- 2024
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29. Associations Between End-Tidal Carbon Dioxide During Pediatric Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Quality, and Survival.
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Morgan RW, Reeder RW, Bender D, Cooper KK, Friess SH, Graham K, Meert KL, Mourani PM, Murray R, Nadkarni VM, Nataraj C, Palmer CA, Srivastava N, Tilford B, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Berg RA, and Sutton RM
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- Child, Humans, Carbon Dioxide, Patient Discharge, Prospective Studies, Adolescent, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest
- Abstract
Background: Supported by laboratory and clinical investigations of adult cardiopulmonary arrest, resuscitation guidelines recommend monitoring end-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO
2 ) as an indicator of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) quality, but they note that "specific values to guide therapy have not been established in children.", Methods: This prospective observational cohort study was a National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute-funded ancillary study of children in the ICU-RESUS trial (Intensive Care Unit-Resuscitation Project; NCT02837497). Hospitalized children (≤18 years of age and ≥37 weeks postgestational age) who received chest compressions of any duration for cardiopulmonary arrest, had an endotracheal or tracheostomy tube at the start of CPR, and evaluable intra-arrest ETCO2 data were included. The primary exposure was event-level average ETCO2 during the first 10 minutes of CPR (dichotomized as ≥20 mm Hg versus <20 mm Hg on the basis of adult literature). The primary outcome was survival to hospital discharge. Secondary outcomes were sustained return of spontaneous circulation, survival to discharge with favorable neurological outcome, and new morbidity among survivors. Poisson regression measured associations between ETCO2 and outcomes as well as the association between ETCO2 and other CPR characteristics: (1) invasively measured systolic and diastolic blood pressures, and (2) CPR quality and chest compression mechanics metrics (ie, time to CPR start; chest compression rate, depth, and fraction; ventilation rate)., Results: Among 234 included patients, 133 (57%) had an event-level average ETCO2 ≥20 mm Hg. After controlling for a priori covariates, average ETCO2 ≥20 mm Hg was associated with a higher incidence of survival to hospital discharge (86/133 [65%] versus 48/101 [48%]; adjusted relative risk, 1.33 [95% CI, 1.04-1.69]; P =0.023) and return of spontaneous circulation (95/133 [71%] versus 59/101 [58%]; adjusted relative risk, 1.22 [95% CI, 1.00-1.49]; P =0.046) compared with lower values. ETCO2 ≥20 mm Hg was not associated with survival with favorable neurological outcome or new morbidity among survivors. Average2 ≥20 mm Hg was associated with higher systolic and diastolic blood pressures during CPR, lower CPR ventilation rates, and briefer pre-CPR arrest durations compared with lower values. Chest compression rate, depth, and fraction did not differ between ETCO2 groups., Conclusions: In this multicenter study of children with in-hospital cardiopulmonary arrest, ETCO2 ≥20 mm Hg was associated with better outcomes and higher intra-arrest blood pressures, but not with chest compression quality metrics., Competing Interests: Disclosures None.- Published
- 2024
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30. Chest compressions for pediatric organized rhythms: A hemodynamic and outcomes analysis.
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Zinna SS, Morgan RW, Reeder RW, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Cooper KK, Michael Dean J, Wesley Diddle J, Federman M, Fernandez R, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Harding ML, Hehir DA, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Landis WP, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Meert KL, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Notterman D, Pollack MM, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Tilford B, Viteri S, Wessel D, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Zuppa AF, Berg RA, and Sutton RM
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- Child, Humans, Prospective Studies, Hemodynamics, Pressure, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Aim: Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) guidelines recommend starting CPR for heart rates (HRs) less than 60 beats per minute (bpm) with poor perfusion. Objectives were to (1) compare HRs and arterial blood pressures (BPs) prior to CPR among patients with clinician-reported bradycardia with poor perfusion ("BRADY") vs. pulseless electrical activity (PEA); and (2) determine if hemodynamics prior to CPR are associated with outcomes., Methods and Results: Prospective observational cohort study performed as a secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUScitation trial (NCT028374497). Comparisons occurred (1) during the 15 seconds "immediately" prior to CPR and (2) over the two minutes prior to CPR, stratified by age (≤1 year, >1 year). Poisson regression models assessed associations between hemodynamics and outcomes. Primary outcome was return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Pre-CPR HRs were lower in BRADY vs. PEA (≤1 year: 63.8 [46.5, 87.0] min
-1 vs. 120 [93.2, 150.0], p < 0.001; >1 year: 67.4 [54.5, 87.0] min-1 vs. 100 [66.7, 120], p < 0.014). Pre-CPR pulse pressure was higher among BRADY vs. PEA (≤1 year (12.9 [9.0, 28.5] mmHg vs. 10.4 [6.1, 13.4] mmHg, p > 0.001). Pre-CPR pulse pressure ≥ 20 mmHg was associated with higher rates of ROSC among PEA (aRR 1.58 [CI95 1.07, 2.35], p = 0.022) and survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome in both groups (BRADY: aRR 1.28 [CI95 1.01, 1.62], p = 0.040; PEA: aRR 1.94 [CI95 1.19, 3.16], p = 0.008). Pre-CPR HR ≥ 60 bpm was not associated with outcomes., Conclusions: Pulse pressure and HR are used clinically to differentiate BRADY from PEA. A pre-CPR pulse pressure >20 mmHg was associated with improved patient outcomes., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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31. Venovenous Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Initiation for Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome With Cardiovascular Instability is Associated With an Immediate and Sustained Decrease in Vasoactive-Inotropic Scores.
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Chilcote D, Sriram A, Slovis J, Morgan RW, Schaubel DE, Connelly J, Berg RA, Keim G, Yehya N, Kilbaugh T, and Himebauch AS
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- Humans, Child, Retrospective Studies, Arteries, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation, Respiratory Distress Syndrome therapy, Respiratory Insufficiency therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the association of venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO) initiation with changes in vasoactive-inotropic scores (VISs) in children with pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS) and cardiovascular instability., Design: Retrospective cohort study., Setting: Single academic pediatric ECMO center., Patients: Children (1 mo to 18 yr) treated with VV-ECMO (2009-2019) for PARDS with need for vasopressor or inotropic support at ECMO initiation., Measurements and Main Results: Arterial blood gas values, VIS, mean airway pressure (mPaw), and oxygen saturation (Sp o2 ) values were recorded hourly relative to the start of ECMO flow for 24 hours pre-VV-ECMO and post-VV-ECMO cannulation. A sharp kink discontinuity regression analysis clustered by patient tested the difference in VISs and regression line slopes immediately surrounding cannulation. Thirty-two patients met inclusion criteria: median age 6.6 years (interquartile range [IQR] 1.5-11.7), 22% immunocompromised, and 75% had pneumonia or sepsis as the cause of PARDS. Pre-ECMO characteristics included: median oxygenation index 45 (IQR 35-58), mPaw 32 cm H 2o (IQR 30-34), 97% on inhaled nitric oxide, and 81% on an advanced mode of ventilation. Median VIS immediately before VV-ECMO cannulation was 13 (IQR 8-25) with an overall increasing VIS trajectory over the hours before cannulation. VISs decreased and the slope of the regression line reversed immediately surrounding the time of cannulation (robust p < 0.0001). There were pre-ECMO to post-ECMO cannulation decreases in mPaw (32 vs 20 cm H 2o , p < 0.001) and arterial P co2 (64.1 vs 50.1 mm Hg, p = 0.007) and increases in arterial pH (7.26 vs 7.38, p = 0.001), arterial base excess (2.5 vs 5.2, p = 0.013), and SpO 2 (91% vs 95%, p = 0.013)., Conclusions: Initiation of VV-ECMO was associated with an immediate and sustained reduction in VIS in PARDS patients with cardiovascular instability. This VIS reduction was associated with decreased mPaw and reduced respiratory and/or metabolic acidosis as well as improved oxygenation., Competing Interests: Dr. Keim received an institutional grant. Grant funding was paid to the affiliated institutions in support of the ongoing work of Drs. Morgan (National Institutes of Health [NIH] National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [NHLBI] K23-HL148541), Berg (NIH 5R01HL147616-03, NIH 1RL1HD107777-01), Yehya (NIH NHLBI 5R01HL148054-03), Schaubel (NIH NIDDK R01-DK070869), and Himebauch (NIH NHLBI K23-HL153759). Dr. Himebauch’s institution received funding from the NHLBI. Drs. Himebauch, Sriram, and Morgan received support for article research from the NIH. Dr. Sriram’s institution received funding from the NHBLI (K23-HL153759). Dr. Morgan’s institution received funding from the NHBLI (K23HL148541). Dr. Yehya’s institution received funding from Pfizer. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.)
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- 2024
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32. Survival With Favorable Neurologic Outcome and Quality of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Following In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest in Children With Cardiac Disease Compared With Noncardiac Disease.
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Federman M, Sutton RM, Reeder RW, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Berg RA, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Dean JM, Diddle JW, Fernandez R, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Hehir DA, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Kirkpatrick T, Maa T, Maitoza LA, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Meert KL, Morgan RW, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Notterman D, Palmer CA, Pollack MM, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Tilford B, Viteri S, Wessel D, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Zuppa AF, and Naim MY
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Hospitals, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy, Heart Diseases complications, Heart Diseases therapy, Cardiac Surgical Procedures
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess associations between outcome and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) quality for in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) in children with medical cardiac, surgical cardiac, or noncardiac disease., Design: Secondary analysis of a multicenter cluster randomized trial, the ICU-RESUScitation Project (NCT02837497, 2016-2021)., Setting: Eighteen PICUs., Patients: Children less than or equal to 18 years old and greater than or equal to 37 weeks postconceptual age receiving chest compressions (CC) of any duration during the study., Interventions: None., Measurements and Main Results: Of 1,100 children with IHCA, there were 273 medical cardiac (25%), 383 surgical cardiac (35%), and 444 noncardiac (40%) cases. Favorable neurologic outcome was defined as no more than moderate disability or no worsening from baseline Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category at discharge. The medical cardiac group had lower odds of survival with favorable neurologic outcomes compared with the noncardiac group (48% vs 55%; adjusted odds ratio [aOR] [95% CI], aOR 0.59 [95% CI, 0.39-0.87], p = 0.008) and surgical cardiac group (48% vs 58%; aOR 0.64 [95% CI, 0.45-0.9], p = 0.01). We failed to identify a difference in favorable outcomes between surgical cardiac and noncardiac groups. We also failed to identify differences in CC rate, CC fraction, ventilation rate, intra-arrest average target diastolic or systolic blood pressure between medical cardiac versus noncardiac, and surgical cardiac versus noncardiac groups. The surgical cardiac group had lower odds of achieving target CC depth compared to the noncardiac group (OR 0.15 [95% CI, 0.02-0.52], p = 0.001). We failed to identify a difference in the percentage of patients achieving target CC depth when comparing medical cardiac versus noncardiac groups., Conclusions: In pediatric IHCA, medical cardiac patients had lower odds of survival with favorable neurologic outcomes compared with noncardiac and surgical cardiac patients. We failed to find differences in CPR quality between medical cardiac and noncardiac patients, but there were lower odds of achieving target CC depth in surgical cardiac compared to noncardiac patients., Competing Interests: This study was funded by the following grants from the National Institute of Health National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development: R01HL131544, R01HD049934, UG1HD049981, UG1HD049983, UG1050096, UG1HD063108, UG1HD083166, UG1HD083170, UG1HD083171, and K23HL148541. Drs. Sutton and Manga’s institution received funding from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Drs. Sutton, Reeder, Bell, Berg, Carcillo, Carpenter, Dean, Fernandez, Fink, Frazier, Friess, Graham, Hall, Horvat, Manga, McQuillen, Meert, Morgan, Mourani, Nadkarni, Pollack, Sapru, Schneiter, Wessel, Yates, Zuppa, and Naim received support for article research from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Drs. Reeder, Bell, Berg, Carcillo, Carpenter, Dean, Fink, Friess, Hall, Meert, Morgan, Mourani, Nadkarni, Pollack, Sapru, Wessel, Yates, Zuppa, and Naim’s institutions received funding from the NIH. Dr. Carcillo’s institution received funding from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. Dr. Diddle received funding from Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals via his institution. Dr. Fink’s institution received funding from the Neurocritical Care Society; she received funding from the American Board of Pediatrics. Dr. Franzon’s institution received funding from ICU-RESUScitation/Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network. Dr. Hall received funding from Abbvie and Kiadis. Drs. Horvat, Maa, Manga, McQuillen, and Schneiter’s institutions received funding from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. Dr. Nadkarni’s institution received funding from Laerdal Foundation-RQI Programs, Nihon-Kohden, Philips, Defibtech, and HeartHero; he received funding from the Society of Critical Care Medicine as President (2023–2024) and the NIH; he disclosed that he is a volunteer for Citizen cardiopulmonary resuscitation Foundation Board, the American Heart Association Committees, and the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation Board. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.)
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- 2024
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33. The Latest in Resuscitation Research: Highlights From the 2022 American Heart Association's Resuscitation Science Symposium.
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Stancati JA, Owyang CG, Araos JD, Agarwal S, Grossestreuer AV, Counts CR, Johnson NJ, Morgan RW, Moskowitz A, Perman SM, Sawyer KN, Yuriditsky E, Horowitz JM, Kaviyarasu A, Palasz J, Abella BS, and Teran F
- Subjects
- American Heart Association, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
- Abstract
Background: Every year the American Heart Association's Resuscitation Science Symposium (ReSS) brings together a community of international resuscitation science researchers focused on advancing cardiac arrest care., Methods and Results: The American Heart Association's ReSS was held in Chicago, Illinois from November 4th to 6th, 2022. This annual narrative review summarizes ReSS programming, including awards, special sessions and scientific content organized by theme and plenary session., Conclusions: By exploring both the science of resuscitation and important related topics including survivorship, disparities, and community-focused programs, this meeting provided important resuscitation updates.
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- 2023
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34. Does the interpersonal theory of suicide explain relationships between muscle dysmorphia symptoms and suicidal ideation?
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Grunewald W, Ortiz SN, Morgan RW, and Smith AR
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- Male, Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Interpersonal Relations, Body Image psychology, Risk Factors, Psychological Theory, Muscles, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide
- Abstract
Muscle dysmorphia (MD) symptoms are robustly associated with suicidal thoughts/behaviors. Risk factors for suicidal ideation, such as perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness, may help explain the relationship between MD symptoms and suicidal ideation. The current study extended past cross-sectional research by testing if perceived burdensomeness and/or thwarted belongingness mediated longitudinal relationships between MD symptoms and suicidal ideation. Two hundred and sixty-nine U.S. men recruited from Prolific completed self-report measures at three timepoints separated by one month each. Analyses used an adapted version of a longitudinal three-wave mediation model to test study hypotheses. Perceived burdensomeness mediated longitudinal relationships between MD symptoms and suicidal ideation. Thwarted belongingness did not show significant relationships with MD symptoms or suicidal ideation. Results extend past research by demonstrating that perceived burdensomeness may be a mechanism underlying longitudinal relationships between MD symptoms and suicidal ideation while establishing temporal ordering. Clinicians may consider targeting perceived burdensomeness in cases of comorbid MD/suicidality by using techniques that promote interpersonal effectiveness., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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35. Wolf Creek XVII part 9: Wolf Creek Innovator in Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation Science Award.
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Gottula AL, Maciel CB, Nishikimi M, Kalra R, Sunshine J, and Morgan RW
- Abstract
The Wolf Creek Conferences on Cardiac Arrest Resuscitation began in 1975, and have served as an important forum for thought leaders and scientists from industry and academia to come together with the common goal of advancing the field of cardiac arrest resuscitation. The Wolf Creek XVII Conference was hosted by the Max Harry Weil Institute of Critical Care Research and Innovation in Ann Arbor, Michigan on June 14-17, 2023. A new component of the conference was the Wolf Creek Innovator in Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation Science Award competition. The competition was designed to recognize early career investigators from around the world who's science is challenging the current paradigms in the field. Finalists were selected by a panel of international experts and invited to present in-person at the conference. The winner was chosen by electronic vote of conference participants and awarded a $10,0000 cash prize. Finalists included Carolina Barbosa Maciel from the University of Florida, Adam Gottula from the University of Michigan, Rajat Kalra from the University of Minnesota, Ryan Morgan from the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Mitsuaki Nishikimi form Hiroshima University, and Jacob Sunshine from the University of Washington. Ryan Morgan from the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia was selected as the 2023 Wolf Creek Innovator Awardee. This manuscript provides a summary of the work presented by each of the finalists and provides a preview of the future of resuscitation science., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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36. Identification of post-cardiac arrest blood pressure thresholds associated with outcomes in children: an ICU-Resuscitation study.
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Gardner MM, Hehir DA, Reeder RW, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Berg RA, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Dean JM, Diddle JW, Federman M, Fernandez R, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Harding ML, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Meert KL, Morgan RW, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Notterman D, Pollack MM, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Tilford B, Viteri S, Wessel D, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Zuppa AF, Sutton RM, and Topjian AA
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Blood Pressure, Hospital Mortality, Intensive Care Units, Heart Arrest complications, Heart Arrest therapy, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Hypotension complications
- Abstract
Introduction: Though early hypotension after pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) is associated with inferior outcomes, ideal post-arrest blood pressure (BP) targets have not been established. We aimed to leverage prospectively collected BP data to explore the association of post-arrest BP thresholds with outcomes. We hypothesized that post-arrest systolic and diastolic BP thresholds would be higher than the currently recommended post-cardiopulmonary resuscitation BP targets and would be associated with higher rates of survival to hospital discharge., Methods: We performed a secondary analysis of prospectively collected BP data from the first 24 h following return of circulation from index IHCA events enrolled in the ICU-RESUScitation trial (NCT02837497). The lowest documented systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) were percentile-adjusted for age, height and sex. Receiver operator characteristic curves and cubic spline analyses controlling for illness category and presence of pre-arrest hypotension were generated exploring the association of lowest post-arrest SBP and DBP with survival to hospital discharge and survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category of 1-3 or no change from baseline). Optimal cutoffs for post-arrest BP thresholds were based on analysis of receiver operator characteristic curves and spline curves. Logistic regression models accounting for illness category and pre-arrest hypotension examined the associations of these thresholds with outcomes., Results: Among 693 index events with 0-6 h post-arrest BP data, identified thresholds were: SBP > 10th percentile and DBP > 50th percentile for age, sex and height. Fifty-one percent (n = 352) of subjects had lowest SBP above threshold and 50% (n = 346) had lowest DBP above threshold. SBP and DBP above thresholds were each associated with survival to hospital discharge (SBP: aRR 1.21 [95% CI 1.10, 1.33]; DBP: aRR 1.23 [1.12, 1.34]) and survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome (SBP: aRR 1.22 [1.10, 1.35]; DBP: aRR 1.27 [1.15, 1.40]) (all p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Following pediatric IHCA, subjects had higher rates of survival to hospital discharge and survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome when BP targets above a threshold of SBP > 10th percentile for age and DBP > 50th percentile for age during the first 6 h post-arrest., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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37. Prediction of Return of Spontaneous Circulation in a Pediatric Swine Model of Cardiac Arrest Using Low-Resolution Multimodal Physiological Waveforms.
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Silva LEV, Shi L, Gaudio HA, Padmanabhan V, Morgan RW, Slovis JM, Forti RM, Morton S, Lin Y, Laurent GH, Breimann J, Yun BH, Ranieri NR, Bowe M, Baker WB, Kilbaugh TJ, Ko TS, and Tsui FR
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- Humans, Animals, Swine, Child, Return of Spontaneous Circulation, Hemodynamics, Blood Pressure, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Monitoring physiological waveforms, specifically hemodynamic variables (e.g., blood pressure waveforms) and end-tidal CO
2 (EtCO2 ), during pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) has been demonstrated to improve survival rates and outcomes when compared to standard depth-guided CPR. However, waveform guidance has largely been based on thresholds for single parameters and therefore does not leverage all the information contained in multimodal data. We hypothesize that the combination of multimodal physiological features improves the prediction of the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), the clinical indicator of short-term CPR success. We used machine learning algorithms to evaluate features extracted from eight low-resolution (4 samples per minute) physiological waveforms to predict ROSC. The waveforms were acquired from the 2nd to 10th minute of CPR in pediatric swine models of cardiac arrest (N = 89, 8-12 kg). The waveforms were divided into segments with increasing length (both forward and backward) for feature extraction, and machine learning algorithms were trained for ROSC prediction. For the full CPR period (2nd to 10th minute), the area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC) was 0.93 (95% CI: 0.87-0.99) for the multivariate model, 0.70 (0.55-0.85) for EtCO2 and 0.80 (0.67-0.93) for coronary perfusion pressure. The best prediction performances were achieved when the period from the 6th to the 10th minute was included. Poor predictions were observed for some individual waveforms, e.g., right atrial pressure. In conclusion, multimodal waveform features carry relevant information for ROSC prediction. Using multimodal waveform features in CPR guidance has the potential to improve resuscitation success and reduce mortality.- Published
- 2023
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38. The association of arterial blood pressure waveform-derived area duty cycle with intra-arrest hemodynamics and cardiac arrest outcomes.
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Rappold TE, Morgan RW, Reeder RW, Cooper KK, Weeks MK, Widmann NJ, Graham K, Berg RA, and Sutton RM
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- Humans, Child, Preschool, Arterial Pressure, Retrospective Studies, Hemodynamics physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Aim: Develop a novel, physiology-based measurement of duty cycle (Arterial Blood Pressure-Area Duty Cycle [ABP-ADC]) and evaluate the association of ABP-ADC with intra-arrest hemodynamics and patient outcomes., Methods: This was a secondary retrospective study of prospectively collected data from the ICU-RESUS trial (NCT02837497). Invasive arterial waveform data were used to derive ABP-ADC. The primary exposure was ABP-ADC group (<30%; 30-35%; >35%). The primary outcome was systolic blood pressure (sBP). Secondary outcomes included intra-arrest physiologic goals, CPR quality targets, and patient outcomes. In an exploratory analysis, adjusted splines and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to determine an optimal ABP-ADC associated with improved hemodynamics and outcomes using a multivariable model., Results: Of 1129 CPR events, 273 had evaluable arterial waveform data. Mean age is 2.9 years + 4.9 months. Mean ABP-ADC was 32.5% + 5.0%. In univariable analysis, higher ABP-ADC was associated with lower sBP (p < 0.01) and failing to achieve sBP targets (p < 0.01). Other intra-arrest physiologic parameters, quality metrics, and patient outcomes were similar across ABP-ADC groups. Using spline/ROC analysis and clinical judgement, the optimal ABP-ADC cut point was set at 33%. On multivariable analysis, sBP was significantly higher (point estimate 13.18 mmHg, CI95 5.30-21.07, p < 0.01) among patients with ABP-ADC < 33%. Other intra-arrest physiologic and patient outcomes were similar., Conclusions: In this multicenter cohort, a lower ABP-ADC was associated with higher sBPs during CPR. Although ABP-ADC was not associated with outcomes, further studies are needed to define the interactions between CPR mechanics and intra arrest patient physiology., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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39. Association of CPR simulation program characteristics with simulated and actual performance during paediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest.
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Cashen K, Sutton RM, Reeder RW, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Berg RA, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Wesley Diddle J, Federman M, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Hehir DA, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Morgan RW, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Notterman D, Palmer CA, Pollack MM, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Viteri S, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Zuppa AF, and Meert KL
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Prospective Studies, Clinical Competence, Hospitals, Pediatric, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation education, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate associations between characteristics of simulated point-of-care cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training with simulated and actual intensive care unit (ICU) CPR performance, and with outcomes of children after in-hospital cardiac arrest., Methods: This is a pre-specified secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUScitation Project; a prospective, multicentre cluster randomized interventional trial conducted in 18 ICUs from October 2016-March 2021. Point-of-care bedside simulations with real-time feedback to allow multidisciplinary ICU staff to practice CPR on a portable manikin were performed and quality metrics (rate, depth, release velocity, chest compression fraction) were recorded. Actual CPR performance was recorded for children 37 weeks post-conceptual age to 18 years who received chest compressions of any duration, and included intra-arrest haemodynamics and CPR mechanics. Outcomes included survival to hospital discharge with favourable neurologic status., Results: Overall, 18,912 point-of-care simulations were included. Simulation characteristics associated with both simulation and actual performance included site, participant discipline, and timing of simulation training. Simulation characteristics were not associated with survival with favourable neurologic outcome. However, participants in the top 3 sites for improvement in survival with favourable neurologic outcome were more likely to have participated in a simulation in the past month, on a weekday day, to be nurses, and to achieve targeted depth of compression and chest compression fraction goals during simulations than the bottom 3 sites., Conclusions: Point-of-care simulation characteristics were associated with both simulated and actual CPR performance. More recent simulation, increased nursing participation, and simulation training during daytime hours may improve CPR performance., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: ‘This study was funded by the following grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the Eunice Kennedy ShriverNational Institute of Child Health and Human Development: R01HL131544, U01HD049934, UG1HD049981, UG1HD049983, UG1HD050096, UG1HD063108, UG1HD083166, UG1HD083170, UG1HD083171, and K23HL148541. Two of the co-authors, Dr. Robert Berg and Dr. Vinay Nadkarni, are members of the Resuscitation Editorial Board.’., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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40. Impaired echocardiographic left ventricular global longitudinal strain after pediatric cardiac arrest children is associated with mortality.
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Gardner MM, Wang Y, Himebauch AS, Conlon TW, Graham K, Morgan RW, Feng R, Berg RA, Yehya N, Mercer-Rosa L, and Topjian AA
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- Humans, Child, Retrospective Studies, Cohort Studies, Prospective Studies, Global Longitudinal Strain, Echocardiography methods, Ventricular Function, Left, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left etiology, Heart Arrest complications, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Background: Global longitudinal strain (GLS) is an echocardiographic method to identify left ventricular (LV) dysfunction after cardiac arrest that is less sensitive to loading conditions. We aimed to identify the frequency of impaired GLS following pediatric cardiac arrest, and its association with hospital mortality., Methods: This is a retrospective single-center cohort study of children <18 years of age treated in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) after in- or out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA and OHCA), with echocardiogram performed within 24 hours of initiation of post-arrest PICU care between 2013 and 2020. Patients with congenital heart disease, post-arrest extracorporeal support, or inability to measure GLS were excluded. Echocardiographic LV ejection fraction (EF) and shortening fraction (SF) were abstracted from the chart. GLS was measured post hoc; impaired strain was defined as LV GLS ≥ 2 SD worse than age-dependent normative values. Demographics and pre-arrest, arrest, and post-arrest characteristics were compared between subjects with normal versus impaired GLS. Correlation between GLS, SF and EF were calculated with Pearson comparison. Logistic regression tested the association of GLS with mortality. Area under the receiver operator curve (AUROC) was calculated for discriminative utility of GLS, EF, and SF with mortality., Results: GLS was measured in 124 subjects; impaired GLS was present in 46 (37.1%). Subjects with impaired GLS were older (median 7.9 vs. 1.9 years, p < 0.001), more likely to have ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation as initial rhythm (19.6% versus 3.8%, p = 0.017) and had higher peak troponin levels in the first 24 hours post-arrest (median 2.5 vs. 0.5, p = 0.002). There were no differences between arrest location or CPR duration by GLS groups. Subjects with impaired GLS compared to normal GLS had lower median EF (42.6% versus 62.3%) and median SF (23.3% versus 36.6%), all p < 0.001, with strong inverse correlation between GLS and EF (rho -0.76, p < 0.001) and SF (rho -0.71, p < 0.001). Patients with impaired GLS had higher rates of mortality (60% vs. 32%, p = 0.009). GLS was associated with mortality when controlling for age and initial rhythm [aOR 1.17 per 1% increase in GLS (95% CI 1.09-1.26), p < 0.001]. GLS, EF and SF had similar discrimination for mortality: GLS AUROC 0.69 (95% CI 0.60-0.79); EF AUROC 0.71 (95% CI 0.58-0.88); SF AUROC 0.71 (95% CI 0.61-0.82), p = 0.101., Conclusions: Impaired LV function as measured by GLS after pediatric cardiac arrest is associated with hospital mortality. GLS is a novel complementary metric to traditional post-arrest echocardiography that correlates strongly with EF and SF and is associated with mortality. Future large prospective studies of post-cardiac arrest care should investigate the prognostic utilities of GLS, alongside SF and EF., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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41. Outcomes and characteristics of cardiac arrest in children with pulmonary hypertension: A secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUS clinical trial.
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Morgan RW, Reeder RW, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Berger JT, Bishop R, Bochkoris M, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Dean JM, Diddle JW, Federman M, Fernandez R, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Hehir DA, Himebauch AS, Horvat CM, Huard LL, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Meert KL, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Notterman D, Page K, Pollack MM, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Tabbutt S, Tilford B, Viteri S, Wessel D, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Zuppa AF, Berg RA, and Sutton RM
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- Child, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Prospective Studies, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest, Hypertension, Pulmonary diagnosis, Hypertension, Pulmonary epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies have identified pulmonary hypertension (PH) as a relatively common diagnosis in children with in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA), and preclinical laboratory studies have found poor outcomes and low systemic blood pressures during CPR for PH-associated cardiac arrest. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of PH among children with IHCA and the association between PH diagnosis and intra-arrest physiology and survival outcomes., Methods: This was a prospectively designed secondary analysis of patients enrolled in the ICU-RESUS clinical trial (NCT02837497). The primary exposure was a pre-arrest diagnosis of PH. The primary survival outcome was survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category score 1-3 or unchanged from baseline). The primary physiologic outcome was event-level average diastolic blood pressure (DBP) during CPR., Results: Of 1276 patients with IHCAs during the study period, 1129 index IHCAs were enrolled; 184 (16.3%) had PH and 101/184 (54.9%) were receiving inhaled nitric oxide at the time of IHCA. Survival with favorable neurologic outcome was similar between patients with and without PH on univariate (48.9% vs. 54.4%; p = 0.17) and multivariate analyses (aOR 0.82 [95%CI: 0.56, 1.20]; p = 0.32). There were no significant differences in CPR event outcome or survival to hospital discharge. Average DBP, systolic BP, and end-tidal carbon dioxide during CPR were similar between groups., Conclusions: In this prospective study of pediatric IHCA, pre-existing PH was present in 16% of children. Pre-arrest PH diagnosis was not associated with statistically significant differences in survival outcomes or intra-arrest physiologic measures., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Financial support for this project was provided through the National Institutes of Health Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (U01HD049934, UG1HD049981, UG1HD049983, UG1HD050096, UG1HD063108, UG1HD083166, UG1HD083170, and UG1HD083171) and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (R01HL131544, R01HL147616, K23HL148541, and K23HL153759) and by the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Resuscitation Science Center and Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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42. A pilot multiple-baseline study of a mobile cognitive behavioral therapy for the treatment of eating disorders in university students.
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Bohrer BK, Chen Y, Christensen KA, Forbush KT, Thomeczek ML, Richson BN, Chapa DAN, Jarmolowicz DP, Gould SR, Negi S, Perko VL, and Morgan RW
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- Humans, Universities, Treatment Outcome, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Feeding and Eating Disorders therapy, Binge-Eating Disorder psychology, Bulimia
- Abstract
Objective: Eating disorders (EDs) are serious psychiatric disorders associated with substantial morbidity and mortality that are prevalent among university students. Because many students do not receive treatment due to lack of access on university campuses, mobile-health (mHealth) adaptations of evidence-based treatments represent an opportunity to increase treatment accessibility and engagement. The purpose of this study was to test the initial efficacy of Building Healthy Eating and Self-Esteem Together for University Students (BEST-U), which is a 10-week mHealth self-guided cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT-gsh) app that is paired with a brief 25-30-min weekly telehealth coaching, for reducing ED psychopathology in university students., Method: A non-concurrent multiple-baseline design (N = 8) was used to test the efficacy of BEST-U for reducing total ED psychopathology (primary outcome), ED-related behaviors and cognitions (secondary outcomes), and ED-related clinical impairment (secondary outcome). Data were examined using visual analysis and Tau-BC effect-size calculations., Results: BEST-U significantly reduced total ED psychopathology and binge eating, excessive exercise, and restriction (effect sizes ranged from -0.39 to -0.92). Although body dissatisfaction decreased, it was not significant. There were insufficient numbers of participants engaging in purging to evaluate purging outcomes. Clinical impairment significantly reduced from pre-to-post-treatment., Discussion: The current study provided initial evidence that BEST-U is a potentially efficacious treatment for reducing ED symptoms and ED-related clinical impairment. Although larger-scale randomized controlled trials are needed, BEST-U may represent an innovative, scalable tool that could reach greater numbers of underserved university students than traditional intervention-delivery models., Public Significance: Using a single-case experimental design, we found evidence for the initial efficacy of a mobile guided-self-help cognitive-behavioral therapy program for university students with non-low weight binge-spectrum eating disorders. Participants reported significant reductions in ED symptoms and impairment after completion of the 10-week program. Guided self-help programs show promise for filling an important need for treatment among university students with an ED., (© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2023
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43. A Template for Translational Bioinformatics: Facilitating Multimodal Data Analyses in Preclinical Models of Neurological Injury.
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Gaudio HA, Padmanabhan V, Landis WP, Silva LEV, Slovis J, Starr J, Weeks MK, Widmann NJ, Forti RM, Laurent GH, Ranieri NR, Mi F, Degani RE, Hallowell T, Delso N, Calkins H, Dobrzynski C, Haddad S, Kao SH, Hwang M, Shi L, Baker WB, Tsui F, Morgan RW, Kilbaugh TJ, and Ko TS
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Background: Pediatric neurological injury and disease is a critical public health issue due to increasing rates of survival from primary injuries (e.g., cardiac arrest, traumatic brain injury) and a lack of monitoring technologies and therapeutics for the treatment of secondary neurological injury. Translational, preclinical research facilitates the development of solutions to address this growing issue but is hindered by a lack of available data frameworks and standards for the management, processing, and analysis of multimodal data sets., Methods: Here, we present a generalizable data framework that was implemented for large animal research at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia to address this technological gap. The presented framework culminates in an interactive dashboard for exploratory analysis and filtered data set download., Results: Compared with existing clinical and preclinical data management solutions, the presented framework accommodates heterogeneous data types (single measure, repeated measures, time series, and imaging), integrates data sets across various experimental models, and facilitates dynamic visualization of integrated data sets. We present a use case of this framework for predictive model development for intra-arrest prediction of cardiopulmonary resuscitation outcome., Conclusions: The described preclinical data framework may serve as a template to aid in data management efforts in other translational research labs that generate heterogeneous data sets and require a dynamic platform that can easily evolve alongside their research.
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- 2023
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44. Pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest: Respiratory failure characteristics and association with outcomes.
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Shepard LN, Reeder RW, O'Halloran A, Kienzle M, Dowling J, Graham K, Keim GP, Topjian AA, Yehya N, Sutton RM, and Morgan RW
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- Child, Humans, Infant, Retrospective Studies, Oxygen, Hospitals, Pediatric, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy, Respiratory Insufficiency etiology, Respiratory Insufficiency therapy
- Abstract
Aims: To characterize respiratory failure prior to pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) and to associate pre-arrest respiratory failure characteristics with survival outcomes., Methods: This is a single-center, retrospective cohort study from a prospectively identified cohort of children <18 years in intensive care units (ICUs) who received cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) for ≥1 minute between January 1, 2017 and June 30, 2021, and were receiving invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) in the hour prior to IHCA. Patient characteristics, ventilatory support and gas exchange immediately pre-arrest were described and their association with the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) was measured., Results: In the 187 events among 154 individual patients, the median age was 0.9 [0.2, 2.4] years, and CPR duration was 7.5 [3, 29] minutes. Respiratory failure was acute prior to 106/187 (56.7%) events, and the primary indication for IMV was respiratory in nature in 107/187 (57.2%) events. Immediately pre-arrest, the median positive end-expiratory pressure was 8 [5, 10] cmH
2 O; mean airway pressure was 13 [10,18] cmH2 O; peak inspiratory pressure was 28 [24, 35] cmH2 O; and fraction of inhaled oxygen (FiO2) was 0.40 [0.25, 0.80]. Pre-arrest FiO2 was lower in patients with ROSC vs. without ROSC (0.30 vs. 0.99; p < 0.001). Patients without ROSC had greater severity of pre-arrest oxygenation failure (p < 0.001) as defined by oxygenation index, oxygen saturation index, P/F ratio or S/F ratio., Conclusions: There was substantial heterogeneity in respiratory failure characteristics and ventilatory requirements pre-arrest. Higher pre-arrest oxygen requirement and greater degree of oxygenation failure were associated with worse survival outcomes., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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45. Clinician-reported physiologic monitoring of cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality during pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest: A propensity-weighted cohort study.
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Kienzle MF, Morgan RW, Alvey JS, Reeder R, Berg RA, Nadkarni V, Topjian AA, Lasa JJ, Raymond TT, and Sutton RM
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- Humans, Child, Cohort Studies, Retrospective Studies, Carbon Dioxide, Monitoring, Physiologic, Hospitals, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Aims: The primary objective was to determine the association between clinician-reported use of end-tidal CO2 (ETCO2) or diastolic blood pressure (DBP) to monitor cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) quality during pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest (pIHCA) and survival outcomes., Design: A retrospective cohort study was performed in two cohorts: (1) Patients with an invasive airway in place at the time of arrest to evaluate ETCO2 use, and (2) patients with an arterial line in place at the time of arrest to evaluate DBP use. The primary exposure was clinician-reported use of ETCO2 or DBP. The primary outcome was return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Propensity-weighted logistic regression evaluated the association between monitoring and outcomes., Setting: Hospitals reporting to the American Heart Association's Get With The Guidelines®- Resuscitation registry (2007-2021)., Patients: Children with index IHCA with an invasive airway or arterial line at the time of arrest., Results: Between January 2007 and May 2021, there were 15,280 pediatric CPR events with an invasive airway or arterial line in place at the time of arrest. Of 7159 events with an invasive airway, 6829 were eligible for analysis. Of 2978 events with an arterial line, 2886 were eligible. Clinicians reported using ETCO2 in 1335/6829 (20%) arrests and DBP in 1041/2886 (36%). Neither exposure was associated with ROSC. ETCO2 monitoring was associated with higher odds of 24-hour survival (aOR 1.17 [1.02, 1.35], p = 0.03)., Conclusions: Neither clinician-reported ETCO2 monitoring nor DBP monitoring during pIHCA were associated with ROSC. Monitoring of ETCO2 was associated with 24-hour survival., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Dr. Vinay Nadkarni is a member of the Editorial Board of Resuscitation., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2023
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46. Design and methods of the Longitudinal Eating Disorders Assessment Project research consortium for veterans.
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Forbush KT, Swanson TJ, Gaddy M, Oehlert M, Doan A, Morgan RW, O'Brien C, Chen Y, Christian K, Song QC, Watson D, and Wiese J
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- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Veterans, Military Personnel, Feeding and Eating Disorders diagnosis
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Introduction: Military service members must maintain a certain body mass index and body fat percentage. Due to weight-loss pressures, some service members may resort to unhealthy behaviors that place them at risk for the development of an eating disorder (ED)., Objectives: To understand the scope and impact of EDs in military service members and veterans, we formed the Longitudinal Eating Disorders Assessment Project (LEAP) Consortium. LEAP aims to develop novel screening, assessment, classification, and treatment tools for veterans and military members with a focus on EDs and internalizing psychopathology., Methods: We recruited two independent nationally representative samples of post-9/11 veterans who were separated from service within the past year. Study 1 was a four-wave longitudinal survey and Study 2 was a mixed-methods study that included surveys, structured-clinical interviews, and qualitative interviews., Results: Recruitment samples were representative of the full population of recently separated veterans. Sample weights were created to adjust for sources of non-response bias to the baseline survey. Attrition was low relative to past studies of this population, with only (younger) age predicting attrition at 1-week follow-up., Conclusions: We expect that the LEAP Consortium data will contribute to improved information about EDs in veterans, a serious and understudied problem., (© 2022 The Authors. International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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47. The authors reply.
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Berg RA, Morgan RW, and Sutton RM
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- 2023
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48. Calcium use during paediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest is associated with worse outcomes.
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Cashen K, Sutton RM, Reeder RW, Ahmed T, Bell MJ, Berg RA, Burns C, Carcillo JA, Carpenter TC, Michael Dean J, Wesley Diddle J, Federman M, Fink EL, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Friess SH, Graham K, Hall M, Hehir DA, Horvat CM, Huard LL, KirkpatrickN T, Maa T, Manga A, McQuillen PS, Morgan RW, Mourani PM, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Notterman D, Page K, Pollack MM, Qunibi D, Sapru A, Schneiter C, Sharron MP, Srivastava N, Viteri S, Wessel D, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, Zuppa AF, and Meert KL
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- Child, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Infant, Calcium, Patient Discharge, Hospitals, Pediatric, Retrospective Studies, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate associations between calcium administration and outcomes among children with in-hospital cardiac arrest and among specific subgroups in which calcium use is hypothesized to provide clinical benefit., Methods: This is a secondary analysis of observational data collected prospectively as part of the ICU-RESUScitation project. Children 37 weeks post-conceptual age to 18 years who received chest compressions in one of 18 intensive care units from October 2016-March 2021 were eligible. Data included child and event characteristics, pre-arrest laboratory values, pre- and intra-arrest haemodynamics, and outcomes. Outcomes included sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), survival to hospital discharge, and survival to hospital discharge with favourable neurologic outcome. A propensity score weighted cohort was used to evaluate associations between calcium use and outcomes. Subgroups included neonates, and children with hyperkalaemia, sepsis, renal insufficiency, cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass, and calcium-avid cardiac diagnoses., Results: Of 1,100 in-hospital cardiac arrests, median age was 0.63 years (IQR 0.19, 3.81); 450 (41%) received calcium. Among the weighted cohort, calcium use was not associated with sustained ROSC (aOR, 0.87; CI95 0.61-1.24; p = 0.445), but was associated with lower rates of both survival to hospital discharge (aOR, 0.68; CI95 0.52-0.89; p = 0.005) and survival with favourable neurologic outcome at hospital discharge (aOR, 0.75; CI95 0.57-0.98; p = 0.038). Among subgroups, calcium use was associated with lower rates of survival to hospital discharge in children with sepsis and renal insufficiency., Conclusions: Calcium use was common during paediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest and associated with worse outcomes at hospital discharge., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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49. The physiologic response to epinephrine and pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation outcomes.
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Morgan RW, Berg RA, Reeder RW, Carpenter TC, Franzon D, Frazier AH, Graham K, Meert KL, Nadkarni VM, Naim MY, Tilford B, Wolfe HA, Yates AR, and Sutton RM
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- Child, Humans, Prospective Studies, Epinephrine pharmacology, Epinephrine therapeutic use, Blood Pressure, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Epinephrine is provided during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to increase systemic vascular resistance and generate higher diastolic blood pressure (DBP) to improve coronary perfusion and attain return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). The DBP response to epinephrine during pediatric CPR and its association with outcomes have not been well described. Thus, the objective of this study was to measure the association between change in DBP after epinephrine administration during CPR and ROSC., Methods: This was a prospective multicenter study of children receiving ≥ 1 min of CPR with ≥ 1 dose of epinephrine and evaluable invasive arterial BP data in the 18 ICUs of the ICU-RESUS trial (NCT02837497). Blood pressure waveforms underwent compression-by-compression quantitative analysis. The mean DBP before first epinephrine dose was compared to mean DBP two minutes post-epinephrine. Patients with ≥ 5 mmHg increase in DBP were characterized as "responders.", Results: Among 147 patients meeting inclusion criteria, 66 (45%) were characterized as responders and 81 (55%) were non-responders. The mean increase in DBP with epinephrine was 4.4 [- 1.9, 11.5] mmHg (responders: 13.6 [7.5, 29.3] mmHg versus non-responders: - 1.5 [- 5.0, 1.5] mmHg; p < 0.001). After controlling for a priori selected covariates, epinephrine response was associated with ROSC (aRR 1.60 [1.21, 2.12]; p = 0.001). Sensitivity analyses identified similar associations between DBP response thresholds of ≥ 10, 15, and 20 mmHg and ROSC; DBP responses of ≥ 10 and ≥ 15 mmHg were associated with higher aRR of survival to hospital discharge and survival with favorable neurologic outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category score of 1-3 or no worsening from baseline)., Conclusions: The change in DBP following epinephrine administration during pediatric in-hospital CPR was associated with return of spontaneous circulation., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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50. Pediatric Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: Development of a Porcine Model and the Influence of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Duration on Brain Injury.
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Slovis JC, Volk L, Mavroudis C, Hefti M, Landis WP, Roberts AL, Delso N, Hallowell T, Graham K, Starr J, Lin Y, Melchior R, Nadkarni V, Sutton RM, Berg RA, Piel S, Morgan RW, and Kilbaugh TJ
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- Animals, Female, Mitochondria, Pilot Projects, Swine, Disease Models, Animal, Brain Injuries, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Heart Arrest therapy
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Background The primary objective was to develop a porcine model of prolonged (30 or 60 minutes) pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) followed by 22- to 24-hour survival with extracorporeal life support, and secondarily to evaluate differences in neurologic injury. Methods and Results Ten-kilogram, 4-week-old female piglets were used. First, model development established the technique (n=8). Then, a pilot study was conducted (n=15). After 80% survival was achieved in the final 5 pilot animals, a proof-of-concept randomized study was completed (n=11). Shams (n=6) underwent anesthesia only. Severe neurological injury was determined by a composite score of mitochondrial function, neuropathology, and cerebral metabolism: scale of 0-6 (severe: >3). Among 15 piglets in the pilot study, overall survival was 10 (67%); of the final 5, overall survival was 4 (80%). Eleven piglets were then randomized to 60 (CPR60, n=5) or 30 minutes of CPR (CPR30, n=5); 1 animal was excluded from prerandomization for intra-abdominal hemorrhage (10/11, 91% survival). Three of 5 animals in the CPR60 group had severe neurological injury scores versus 1 of 5 in the CPR30 group ( P =0.52). During ECMO, CPR60 animals had lower pH (CPR60: 7.4 [IQR 7.4-7.4] versus CPR30: 7.5 [IQR 7.4-7.5], P =0.022), higher lactate (CPR60: 6.8 [IQR 6.8-11] versus CPR30: 4.2 [IQR 4.1-4.3] mmol/L; P =0.012), and higher ICP (CPR60: 19.3 [IQR 11.7-29.3] versus CPR30: 7.9 [IQR 6.7-9.3] mm Hg; P =0.037). Both groups had greater mitochondrial injury than shams (CPR60: P <0.001; CPR30: P <0.001). CPR60 did not differ from CPR30 in mitochondrial respiration, neuropathology, or cerebral metabolism. Conclusions A pediatric porcine model of extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation after 60 and 30 minutes of CPR consistently resulted in 24-hour survival with more severe lactic acidosis in the 60-minute cohort.
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- 2023
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