4.5 Article

Time to awakening after cardiac arrest and the association with target temperature management

Journal

RESUSCITATION
Volume 126, Issue -, Pages 166-171

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2018.01.027

Keywords

Cardiac arrest; Target temperature management; Awakening; Withdrawal; Sedation

Funding

  1. Swedish Heart Lung Foundation [20090275]
  2. AFA-Insurance Foundation [100001]
  3. Swedish Research Council [134281, 296161, 286321]
  4. Regional research support, Region Skane
  5. Governmental funding of clinical research within the Swedish NHS (National Health Services) [M2010/1837, M2010/1641, 353301]
  6. Skane University Hospital, Sweden
  7. Tryg Foundation, Denmark
  8. Hans-Gabriel and Alice Trolle-Wachtmeister Foundation for Medical Research
  9. Thelma Zoegas Foundation
  10. Krapperup Foundation

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Aim: Target temperature management (TTM) at 32-36 degrees C is recommended in unconscious survivors of cardiac arrest. This study reports awakening in the TTM-trial. Our predefined hypotheses were that time until awakening correlates with long-term neurological outcome and is not affected by level of TTM. Methods: Post-hoc analysis of time until awakening after cardiac arrest, its association with long-term (180-days) neurological outcome and predictors of late awakening (day 5 or later). The trial randomized 939 comatose survivors to TTM at 33 degrees C or 36 degrees C with strict criteria for withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies. Administered sedation in the treatment groups was compared. Awakening was defined as a Glasgow Coma Scale motor score 6. Results: 496 patients had registered day of awakening in the ICU, another 43 awoke after ICU discharge. Good neurological outcome was more common in early (275/308, 89%) vs late awakening (142/188, 76%), p < 0.001. Awakening occurred later in TTM33 than in TTM36 (p = 0.002) with no difference in neurological outcome, or cumulative doses of sedative drugs at 12, 24 or 48 h. TTM33 (p = 0.006), clinical seizures (p = 0.004), and lower GCS-M on admission (p = 0.03) were independent predictors of late awakening. Conclusion: Late awakening is common and often has a good neurological outcome. Time to awakening was longer in TTM33 than in TTM36, this difference could not be attributed to differences in sedative drugs administered during the first 48 h.

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