Title: Therapeutic hypothermia:
1www.resuscitation-research.org
Therapeutic hypothermia Who, when and
how to cool?
Kjetil Sunde Ulleval University Hospital
Oslo, Norway
COI No conflicts
2What is the optimal treatment after ROSC?
- Early decision if active treatment. Consider
anoxia time, time - to ROSC, cause of arrest, general condition,
ethical aspects
- if awake, adequate keep them awake!
- if comatose early optimization of
hemodynamics and oxygenation and focus on
optimal vital organ perfusion ? goaldirected,
standardized intensive care treatment
with mechanical ventilation
- Treat the cause of arrest as early as possible
- - revascularization if indicated (the majority
have CHD)
- As early as possible therapeutic hypothermia
- - fast induction, steady and stable maintenance
- - slow, controlled rewarming
3So, I would rephrase the question Who, when,
and how should we treat actively after primary
succesful resuscitation after cardiac arrest?
- get the patient to the right place
- with the right people and a standardized
- post resuscitation care protocol!
? independent of initial rhythm........!!!!!!
4Post cardiac arrest syndrome a reperfusion
injury!
- primary (before CPR) and secondary ischemic
damage (during CPR/after ROSC)
Apoptosis
Coagulation-disorder, microcirculation ?
Inflammation, Ca-changes, blood-brain barrier,
lipid peroxidation
- free radicals
(Lactate production)
M.G. Angelos et al Academic Emergency Medicine
2001, 8909
5Hypothermia physiological effects
Awake patients Tp 30-35 ?C generate heath,
shivering, periph. vasoconstr.,
muscle activity ?, oxygen demand ?,
metabolism ?
- physiological effects to increase the
temperature!
Tp lt 30 ?C shivering ?, metabolism ?,
increased risks for
arrhythmias cardiac arrest
Tp 30 - 31 ?C reduced consciousness, coma
6Hypothermia physiological effects
Controlled therapeutic hypothermia
Metabolic effects 30-35 ?C Oxygen demand
CO2 production ?
Metabolism ?
Cardiovascular effects 36-35 ?C
Tachycardia lt 35 ?C Bradycardia lt 35 ?C
May slightly increase BP, but coma, heavy
sedation and
myocard-dysfunction reduce
BP.................and CO and CI ? with TH lt 32
?C Mild arrhythmias in some patients lt
33 ?C EKG-changes increased PR-and
QT-intervall, wider
QRS-complex 28-30 ?C Increased risk for
tachyarrhythmias, starts
frequently with atrial fibrillation
7Hypothermia physiological effects
Renale effects lt 35 ?C Diuresis ?,
tubular dysfunction
Hematological effects lt 35 ?C Blood
plates and white blood cells ?,
reduced function
Electrolyts/blood sugar lt 35 ?C OBS
electrolyte (Potassium, Phosphate, Mg, Ca)
and blood sugar disorders!
8Optimal treatment during reperfusion with mild
therapeutic hypothermia
9Results UUH from 1.9.03 25.06.07
All patients treated after OHCA at Ulleval
University Hospital with cardiac Etiology
180 patients admitted to ICU
- 56 of all patients survive with favourable
outcome
- 94 of all survivors have a neurological
favourable - outcome
? similar data from Stavanger, Lausanne, Lund,
Uppsala, Helsingborg, Copenhagen, Wienna,
Ljublana, University Hospital Ambroise
Paré.....
10Therapeutic hypothermia for revived non-VF
cardiac arrests at UUH, Oslo
- The same standardized treatment protocol, n58
11Prognostication in cooled patients
- Confirmed by others
- Sunde et al 2007
- Hovdenes et al 2007
- Skulec et al 2008
Oddo et al, Crit Care Med, in press
12Hypothermia Network (2004-07) n 1108 patients
Outcome (6-months) for TH treated group
according to initial rhythm, n931
Quality of CPR!
- 101 patients with a time to ROSC
- of more than 40 minutes (range 40-240 min)
- with an overall good outcome of 27 .
Nielsen et al, Abstract Resuscitation
2008, Ghent
13Prognostic factors
- persisting coma after discontinuation of
sedatives - no signs of breathing - absence
of pupillary light reflexes, corneal reflexes
- seizures - no motor responce to pain
? no clinical absolute predictive signs the
first two days after the arrest!
Edgren et al, Lancet 1993
? Madl et el, Crit Care Med 2000 experienced
physicians agreed correctly in only 52 of
the patients after
reviewing clinical data
24 hrs post arrest
14Hypothermia Network (2004-07), TH in children
(n14)
- median of 15 years (range 3-17),
- out of hospital arrests, 10 witnessed,
- VT/VF 6, asystole 6, PEA 2
- time from cardiac arrest to CPR 8 minutes
- time to ROSC 18.5 minutes.
- the first registered core temperature on
admission was 34.5 ?C.
- at follow-up after six months CPC 1
10 (71) -
CPC 5 (dead) 4 - five of the survivors (all CPC 1) had initial
asystole/PEA
Nielsen et al, Abstract Resuscitation
2008, Ghent
15 TH and newborn-asphyxia
Shankaran S et al. Whole-body TH N Engl J Med.
2005 3531574 -1584.
Gluckman PD et al. Selective head cooling Lancet
2005 365663 - 670
- Further trials to determine the appropriate
method, including comparison - of whole body with selective head cooling
with mild systemic hypothermia, - are required.
16 Future!
- We do not know
- The optimal target temperature (32-37 C/h) ?
- Duration 12 h 24h - 48 h 72h?
- Rewarming how fast? 0.3 - 0.5 C/h?
- Methods of cooling?
- ? Internal vs external cooling ?
- ? Fast vs late ?
- ? Intra arrest cooling vs post ROSC cooling ?
- ? Selective head cooling vs total body cooling?
- Or combination, perhaps fast head cooling
during CPR, - followed by total body cooling ?
17 Main challenge Implementation
- Carefully plan a well-defined implementation
plan - chaired by a charismatic strong
- leader with accessibility
- and skills to change
- identify and beat the barriers!
- define and select important
- collaborators from different
- fields (doctors, nurses)
- financial and institutional support
- a continuous process evaluation with feedback
and research
18Therapeutic hypothermia must be part of our daily
life activities....
19But TH cant, unfortunately, solve everything....