Describe complications of CPR.
Rib fractures
Hemothorax
Hemopericardium
Hemoperitoneum
Solid organ injuries, e.g., liver
Skin burns
Complications of intubation
Describe complications of cardiac arrest.
Ischemic cardiomyopathy
Acute kidney injury
Shock liver
Multiorgan dysfunction syndrome
Neurological dysfunction
Describe the anoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.
Definition: global brain injury caused by complete cessation of blood flow during cardiac arrest
Epidemiology: most common cause of death in patients surviving cardiac arrest [31]
Pathophysiology: cardiac arrest → cessation of blood flow to the brain → anoxia → irreversible neuronal damage and death
List clinical features of anoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.
Neurological deficits (determined by the severity of injury and the affected structures)
Comatose state
Absent or abnormal motor response (e.g., extensor posturing)
Absent spontaneous eye movements
Absent brainstem reflexes (e.g., pupillary light reflex, oculocephalic reflex)
Convulsions (e.g., status epilepticus)
List diagnostics of anoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.
Clinical features consistent with cardiac arrest
It is imperative to exclude other causes of coma (e.g., toxic and metabolic encephalopathies, shock).
Laboratory studies (e.g., CBC, serum electrolytes, toxicology screens)
Imaging
CT brain
Usually normal within the first 2 days
Findings of anoxic injury: cerebral edema, inversion of gray-white matter density
MRI brain: allows for early detection of brain injury
EEG
Characteristic pattern: slowing of the EEG followed by delta activity and, eventually, EEG flattening
Some EEG patterns are markers of a poor prognosis
Describe the management of anoxic-ischemic encephalopahty.
Postresuscitation care (see above)
Avoid hyperthermia. [35][36]
Prevention of hyperglycemia
Complications
Brain death
Coma
Persistent vegetative state
Minimally conscious state
Seizures
Prognosis
The majority of cases have a poor prognosis, indicators of which include:
Increased duration of anoxia
Clinical markers
Absent brainstem reflexes (e.g., pupillary light reflex, corneal reflex)
Persistent dilated pupils
Absent or abnormal motor response
Myoclonic status epilepticus
Other specific markers
Laboratory studies: elevated serum level of neuron-specific enolase
EEG: nonreactive or presence of burst-suppression pattern (suggestive of myoclonic status epilepticus)
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