Back to Search Start Over

Neuropsychological outcome after cardiac arrest : results from a sub-study of the targeted hypothermia versus targeted normothermia after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (TTM2) trial

Authors :
Blennow Nordström, Erik
Vestberg, Susanna
Evald, Lars
Mion, Marco
Segerström, Magnus
Ullén, Susann
Bro-Jeppesen, John
Friberg, Hans
Heimburg, Katarina
Grejs, Anders M.
Keeble, Thomas R.
Kirkegaard, Hans
Ljung, Hanna
Rose, Sofia
Wise, Matthew P.
Rylander, Christian
Undén, Johan
Nielsen, Niklas
Cronberg, Tobias
Lilja, Gisela
Blennow Nordström, Erik
Vestberg, Susanna
Evald, Lars
Mion, Marco
Segerström, Magnus
Ullén, Susann
Bro-Jeppesen, John
Friberg, Hans
Heimburg, Katarina
Grejs, Anders M.
Keeble, Thomas R.
Kirkegaard, Hans
Ljung, Hanna
Rose, Sofia
Wise, Matthew P.
Rylander, Christian
Undén, Johan
Nielsen, Niklas
Cronberg, Tobias
Lilja, Gisela
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cognitive impairment is common following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), but the nature of the impairment is poorly understood. Our objective was to describe cognitive impairment in OHCA survivors, with the hypothesis that OHCA survivors would perform significantly worse on neuropsychological tests of cognition than controls with acute myocardial infarction (MI). Another aim was to investigate the relationship between cognitive performance and the associated factors of emotional problems, fatigue, insomnia, and cardiovascular risk factors following OHCA. METHODS: This was a prospective case-control sub-study of The Targeted Hypothermia versus Targeted Normothermia after Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest (TTM2) trial. Eight of 61 TTM2-sites in Sweden, Denmark, and the United Kingdom included adults with OHCA of presumed cardiac or unknown cause. A matched non-arrest control group with acute MI was recruited. At approximately 7 months post-event, we administered an extensive neuropsychological test battery and questionnaires on anxiety, depression, fatigue, and insomnia, and collected information on the cardiovascular risk factors hypertension and diabetes. RESULTS: Of 184 eligible OHCA survivors, 108 were included, with 92 MI controls enrolled. Amongst OHCA survivors, 29% performed z-score ≤ - 1 (at least borderline-mild impairment) in ≥ 2 cognitive domains, 14% performed z-score ≤ - 2 (major impairment) in ≥ 1 cognitive domain while 54% performed without impairment in any domain. Impairment was most pronounced in episodic memory, executive functions, and processing speed. OHCA survivors performed significantly worse than MI controls in episodic memory (mean difference, MD = - 0.37, 95% confidence intervals [- 0.61, - 0.12]), verbal (MD = - 0.34 [- 0.62, - 0.07]), and visual/constructive functions (MD = - 0.26 [- 0.47, - 0.04]) on linear regressions adjusted for educational attainment and sex. When additionally adjusting for anxiety, depression, fatig

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1415654234
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186.s13054-023-04617-0