Title of article :
Mild protective and resuscitative hypothermia for asphyxial cardiac arrest in rats
Author/Authors :
Feng Xiao، نويسنده , , Peter Safar، نويسنده , , Ann Radovsky، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
It has been shown in dogs that mild hypothermia (34°C) during or immediately after ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest can improve cerebral outcome. The effect of mild hypothermia on outcome after 8 minutes of asphyxiation (5 minutesʹ cardiac arrest) was studied for the first time in rats. Restoration of spontaneous circulation was with external cardiopulmonary resuscitation and observation to 72 hours. Three groups of 10 rats each were studied. At 72 hours postarrest, compared with the normothermic control group 1, final overall performance categories (OPC) and neurological deficit scores (NDS) were numerically better in the resuscitative (post-arrest) hypothermia group 2 and significantly better in the protective (pre-intra-arrest) hypothermia group 3 (P< .05). Total brain histopathological damage scores (HDS) were 17 ± 5 in group 1, 14 ± 6 in group 2 (NS), and 6 ± 2 in group 3 (P< .001 versus group 1). HDS correlated with OPC (r = .6, P< .05) and NDS (r = .7, P< .05). Mild hypothermia improved cerebral outcome after asphyxial cardiac arrest in rats, more when induced before than after arrest. The modelʹs insult is within the therapeutic window, which makes it also suitable for screening other cerebral resuscitation potentials.
Keywords :
Cerebral protection , cerebral resuscitation , Rat model , histopathology , asphyxia , cardiac arrest , cardiopulmonary resuscitation , Cerebral ischemia , hypothemia
Journal title :
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Journal title :
American Journal of Emergency Medicine