Back to Search Start Over

The association of immediate post cardiac arrest diastolic hypertension and survival following pediatric cardiac arrest

Authors :
Vinay M. Nadkarni
Carolann Twelves
Michael J. Bell
Patrick S. McQuillen
Athena F. Zuppa
Ann Pawluszka
Robert M. Sutton
William P. Landis
John T. Berger
J. Michael Dean
Katherine Graham
Mark W. Hall
Andrew R. Yates
Aimee La Bell
Richard Holubkov
Alecia Peterson
Ryan W. Morgan
Daniel A. Notterman
Kathleen L. Meert
Mustafa F. Alkhouli
Anil Sapru
Peter M. Mourani
Lisa Steele
Joseph A. Carcillo
Heidi J. Dalton
Jeni Kwok
Robert A. Berg
Kathryn Malone
Mary Ann DiLiberto
Frank W. Moler
Whitney Coleman
Russell Telford
Thomas P. Shanley
Alexis A. Topjian
Christopher Locandro
Todd C. Carpenter
Murray M. Pollack
Allan Doctor
Ron W Reeder
Elyse Tomanio
Rick Harrison
Sabrina M. Heidemann
Christopher J. L. Newth
Alan Abraham
Monica Weber
Julie Thelen
Source :
Resuscitation
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Aim In-hospital cardiac arrest occurs in >5000 children each year in the US and almost half will not survive to discharge. Animal data demonstrate that an immediate post-resuscitation burst of hypertension is associated with improved survival. We aimed to determine if systolic and diastolic invasive arterial blood pressures immediately (0–20 min) after return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) are associated with survival and neurologic outcomes at hospital discharge. Methods This is a secondary analysis of the Pediatric Intensive Care Quality of CPR (PICqCPR) study of invasively measured blood pressures during intensive care unit CPR. Patients were eligible if they achieved ROSC and had at least one invasively measured blood pressure within the first 20 min following ROSC. Post-ROSC blood pressures were normalized for age, sex and height. “Immediate hypertension” was defined as at least one systolic or diastolic blood pressure >90th percentile. The primary outcome was survival to hospital discharge. Results Of 102 children, 70 (68.6%) had at least one episode of immediate post-CPR diastolic hypertension. After controlling for pre-existing hypotension, duration of CPR, calcium administration, and first documented rhythm, patients with immediate post-CPR diastolic hypertension were more likely to survive to hospital discharge (79.3% vs. 54.5%; adjusted OR = 2.93; 95%CI, 1.16–7.69). Conclusions In this post hoc secondary analysis of the PICqCPR study, 68.6% of subjects had diastolic hypertension within 20 min of ROSC. Immediate post-ROSC hypertension was associated with increased odds of survival to discharge, even after adjusting for covariates of interest.

Details

ISSN :
03009572
Volume :
141
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Resuscitation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eac12ec7af5a2c5fc2b6a79d9c6695dc