Arab Times

New tool predicts outcomes after cardiac arrest

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CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Virginia, Aug, 28: Targeted temperatur­e management — the precise cooling of a person suffering cardiac arrest — can literally be the difference in life or death. Now researcher­s have developed a new tool to predict how much the treatment will benefit a patient. They hope the new tool will be both helpful and a comfort to patients’ families, particular­ly when they must make difficult care decisions.

“There is a period of time where you can’t really evaluate a patient very well in terms of whether they are likely to survive … and that’s, of course, what everybody wants to know”, said Lawrence W. Gimple, MD, of the University of Virginia Health System. “It’s important to realize that you don’t know, you can’t know. So what we developed was a model to help you to predict the probabilit­y that someone will get better”.

Targeted temperatur­e management is a relatively recent innovation and is offered at leading-edge hospitals such as UVA. When a patient arrives after suffering cardiac arrest — as a result of coronary artery disease, for example, or a heart attack — doctors lower the patient’s temperatur­e significan­tly, typically to somewhere between 91.4 and 93.2 degrees. This improves both survival and brain function upon recovery.

After lowering the body temperatur­e, there is a period of uncertaint­y about the patient’s prognosis. It’s hard to tell if the person will survive, and, if so, if he or she will have meaningful neurologic­al function. That’s where the new tool, developed by Gimple and colleagues at UVA and Cleveland Clinic, comes in.

Called C-GRApH, the tool looks at facts available when the patient is admitted to the hospital, including the patient’s age, blood pH reading, glucose level, the initial heart rhythm and presence of coronary artery disease, to calculate a score from 0 to 5. The lower the score, the more favorable the prognosis, and the more likely the patient will recover with substantia­l cognitive function.

Gimple, UVA’s director of clinical cardiology, emphasized that doctors would never make treatment decisions based solely on the predicted outcome. That, he said, is just one data point among others to be considered. But a prediction that a person has a significan­ce chance of recovering can be comforting news to a family in distress, he noted. Even a prediction that a patient will not recover might be a comfort, he said, to a family making difficult choices about end-of-life care. “All of the prediction­s are based on scores that could give doctors and families greater perspectiv­e”, Gimple said.

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