4.5 Article

Electrocardiographic characteristics fail to predict acute coronary occlusions in out-of-hospital cardiac-arrest patients without ST-segment elevation

Journal

RESUSCITATION
Volume 188, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2023.109826

Keywords

Post-arrest ECGs; Post-resuscitation care; Coronary angiography

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This study aimed to evaluate the usefulness of the initial post-resuscitation electrocardiogram in selecting patients for early coronary angiography. The findings showed that the changes in the initial post-resuscitation electrocardiogram were not associated with acute coronary occlusion, but normal electrocardiogram findings were associated with patient survival.
Background: A minority of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients have an acutely occluded coronary artery without manifesting ST-segment ele-vation on their post-resuscitation ECG. Identifying such patients is an issue to providing timely reperfusion therapy. We aimed to evaluate the use-fulness of the initial post-resuscitation electrocardiogram in out-of-hospital-cardiac-arrest patients for selection to perform early coronary angiography.Methods: The study population consisted of 74 of the 99 randomized patients from the PEARL clinical trial with both ECG and angiographic data. The purpose of this study was to investigate initial post-resuscitation electrocardiogram findings from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients without ST-segment elevation for any association with the presence of acute coronary occlusions. Secondarily, we aimed to observe the distribution of abnormal electrocardiogram findings and survival to hospital discharge of subjects.Results: Initial post-resuscitation electrocardiogram findings, including ST-depression, T-wave inversion, bundle branch block, non-specific changes, were not associated with the presence of an acutely occluded coronary. Normal post-resuscitation electrocardiogram findings were asso-ciated with patient survival to hospital discharge but were not associated with the presence or absence of an acute coronary occlusion.Conclusions: Electrocardiogram findings cannot exclude or identify the presence of an acutely occluded coronary in out-of-hospital-cardiac-arrest patients without ST-segment elevation. An acutely occluded coronary may be present regardless of normal electrocardiogram findings.

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