AI Article Synopsis

  • Advancements in cardiac arrest care have improved survival rates, but ensuring good neurologic recovery is equally important.
  • The American Heart Association now recommends targeted temperature management (TTM) for comatose patients post-cardiac arrest; however, recent studies show no significant benefits of TTM at 33°C compared to 37.5°C for neurologic outcomes or mortality.
  • Instead, avoiding fever may be more effective, and techniques like extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation can support recovery and TTM after spontaneous circulation is restored.

Article Abstract

Advancements in cardiac arrest and post-cardiac arrest care have led to improved survival to hospital discharge. While survival to hospital discharge is an important clinical outcome, neurologic recovery is also a priority. With the advancement of targeted temperature management (TTM), the American Heart Association guidelines for post-cardiac arrest care recommend TTM in patients who remain comatose after return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Recently, the TTM2 randomized controlled trial found no significant difference in neurologic function and mortality at 6-months between traditional hypothermia to 33°C versus 37.5°C. While TTM has been evaluated for decades, current literature suggests that the use of TTM to 33° when compared to a protocol of targeted normothermia does not result in improved outcomes. Instead, perhaps active avoidance of fever may be most beneficial. Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation and membrane oxygenation can provide a means of both hemodynamic support and TTM after ROSC. This review aims to describe the pathophysiology, physiologic aspects, clinical trial evidence, changes in post-cardiac arrest care, potential risks, as well as controversies of TTM.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02676591221076286DOI Listing

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