Organ blood flow following cardiac arrest in a swine low-flow cardiopulmonary bypass model☆
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Cited by (19)
European Resuscitation Council Guidelines for Resuscitation 2015. Section 1. Executive summary
2015, ResuscitationCitation Excerpt :Consider insertion of an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) in ischaemic patients with significant left ventricular dysfunction, who have been resuscitated from a ventricular arrhythmia that occurred later than 24–48 h after a primary coronary event.422–424 Animal studies show that immediately after ROSC there is a short period of multifocal cerebral no-reflow followed by transient global cerebral hyperaemia lasting 15–30 min.425–427 This is followed by up to 24 h of cerebral hypoperfusion while the cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen gradually recovers.
European Resuscitation Council and European Society of Intensive Care Medicine Guidelines for Post-resuscitation Care 2015. Section 5 of the European Resuscitation Council Guidelines for Resuscitation 2015.
2015, ResuscitationCitation Excerpt :In all cases, a specialised electrophysiological evaluation should be performed before discharge for placement of an ICD for secondary prevention of sudden cardiac death. Animal studies show that immediately after ROSC there is a short period of multifocal cerebral no-reflow followed by transient global cerebral hyperaemia lasting 15–30 min.129–131 This is followed by up to 24 h of cerebral hypoperfusion while the cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen gradually recovers.
European Resuscitation Council Guidelines for Resuscitation 2010 Section 4. Adult advanced life support
2010, ResuscitationCitation Excerpt :Give potassium to maintain the serum potassium concentration between 4.0 and 4.5 mmol l−1. Immediately after ROSC there is a period of cerebral hyperaemia.670 After asphyxial cardiac arrest, brain oedema may occur transiently after ROSC but it is rarely associated with clinically relevant increases in intracranial pressure.671,672
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Presented in part at The Emergency Medicine Research Society/Society of Academic Emergency Medicine Combined Meeting, 16–18 September, 1993, Cambridge, United Kingdom.