학술논문

Functional outcomes among survivors of pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest are associated with baseline neurologic and functional status, but not with diastolic blood pressure during CPR
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Health Services and Systems
Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Heart Disease
Clinical Research
Cardiovascular
Pediatric
Adolescent
Blood Pressure
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Child
Child
Preschool
Diastole
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Heart Arrest
Hospital Mortality
Hospitals
Pediatric
Humans
Infant
Infant
Newborn
Male
Prognosis
Prospective Studies
Survival Rate
United States
Young Adult
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
Cardiac arrest
In-hospital
Survival
Outcomes
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health
Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network
Pediatric Intensive Care Quality of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Investigators
Nursing
Public Health and Health Services
Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
Clinical sciences
Public health
Language
Abstract
AimDiastolic blood pressure (DBP) during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is associated with survival following pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest. The relationship between intra-arrest haemodynamics and neurological status among survivors of pediatric cardiac arrest is unknown.MethodsThis study represents analysis of data from the prospective multicenter Pediatric Intensive Care Quality of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (PICqCPR) Study. Primary predictor variables were median DBP and median systolic blood pressure (SBP) over the first 10min of CPR. The primary outcome measure was "new substantive morbidity" determined by Functional Status Scale (FSS) and defined as an increase in the FSS of at least 3 points or increase of 2 in a single FSS domain. Univariable analyses were completed to investigate the relationship between new substantive morbidity and BPs during CPR.Results244 index CPR events occurred during the study period, 77 (32%) CPR events met all inclusion criteria as well as having both DBP and FSS data available. Among 77 survivors, 32 (42%) had new substantive morbidity as measured by the FSS score. No significant differences were identified in DBP (median 30.5mmHg vs. 30.9mmHg, p=0.5) or SBP (median 76.3mmHg vs. 63.0mmHg, p=0.2) between patients with and without new substantive morbidity. Children who developed new substantive morbidity were more likely to have lower pre-arrest FSS than those that did not (median [IQR]: 7.5 [6.0-9.0] versus 9.0 [7.0-13.0], p=0.01).ConclusionNew substantive morbidity determined by FSS after a pediatric IHCA was associated with baseline functional status, but not DBP during CPR.