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Cardiac Arrest clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02738099 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

Risk Stratification of Patients Presenting With Cardiac Arrest

Start date: April 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Method: Single center, prospective, non-randomized, unblinded case series of all patients presenting with a cardiac arrest. The proposed study will collect data on all comatose patients presenting with cardiac arrest. The primary end point is death from any cause at 30 days from admission. Significance: Develop criteria to guide an invasive strategy for comatose patients presenting with cardiac arrest, and so avoid ineffective or even futile therapy which carry its own significant risks for patients in the future. The criteria, in turn, can serve as the basis for a prospective, randomized trial in the future.

NCT ID: NCT02722473 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

NSE Ancillary Study of The Therapeutic Hypothermia After Nonshockable Cardiac Arrest Trial.

NSE-HYPERION
Start date: March 2016
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Cardiac arrest is at present a major cause of mortality as well as a cause of disability for the surviving victims.In Europe, every year counts as 300,000 cardiac arrests responsible for 250,000 deaths. Thus, less than 20 % of patients discharged home with impaired quality of life associated with symptoms of tiredness, stress, anxiety. The prognosis is related to the initial cardiac rhythm present during the initiation of resuscitation. Recent progress in the improvement of mortality and neurological outcome has been achieved over the last decade thanks to the systematic implementation of a period of targeted temperature control between 32 and 34 ° C in patients who benefited from the realization of at least one electrical external shock. There are theoretical and clinical arguments to think that achieving the same way a period of targeted temperature control between 32 and 34 ° C in patients treated for cardiac arrest with a non- shockable rhythm on arrival can also benefit from this procedure. However other arguments are against this hypothesis including an increase in the risk of infection , worsening of the patient's hemodynamic status with no benefit to him. To answer this question, we conduce a randomized multicenter study testing the potential improvement of neurological outcome through this procedure targeted temperature control between 32.5 and 33.5 ° C in these patients. NSE-Ancillary Study of HYPERION Trial will determine impact on neurospecific enolase (brain biomarker) of two temperature target for targeted temperature management (33°C or 37°C) after cardiac arrest in non-shockable rhythm.

NCT ID: NCT02722460 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

Resuscitation Registry - Surrogate Markers of Outcome After Cardiac Arrest

CPR
Start date: January 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The aim of the study is to determine surrogate markers for prognostication of unfavorable outcome (death or persistent vegetative state) in cardiopulmonary arrest survivors. These patients are comatose. Conscious patients are unsuitable for prognostication.

NCT ID: NCT02713048 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

Sensitive Troponin I in Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest

Start date: October 2011
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Troponin is a major diagnostic criterion of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) which confirms myocardial damage and necrosis. In out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients its dynamics and diagnostic value is often controversial and has not been well described. Most of prior studies were retrospective, using first generation troponin assays and assessing only admission troponin. The aim of this work is to correlate dynamics of sensitive troponin I with urgent coronary angiography. Patients resuscitated after OHCA will be prospectively divided in three groups based on the results of their urgent angiographies. Serial assessment of sensitive troponin I will be obtained over initial 48 hours. We expect admission troponin will not be predictive of AMI. Over next hours troponin levels will be highest in patients with acute coronary lesion, lower in stable obstructive coronary disease and insignificant in non-obstructive coronary disease. We also expect significant difference in highest values and dynamics of troponin in sub-group with spontaneous reperfusion (TIMI flow 2 and 3) comparing to patients with coronary occlusion (TIMI flow 0 and 1). In patients with non-obstructive disease we expect troponin levels to correlate with duration of cardiac arrest, number of external electric shocks and cumulative dose of adrenaline administered.

NCT ID: NCT02711098 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

IL Ancillary Study of the Therapeutic Hypothermia After Nonshockable Cardiac Arrest Trial.

IL-HYPERION
Start date: March 2016
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Cardiac arrest is at present a major cause of mortality as well as a cause of disability for the surviving victims.In Europe, every year counts as 300,000 cardiac arrests responsible for 250,000 deaths. Thus, less than 20 % of patients discharged home with impaired quality of life associated with symptoms of tiredness, stress, anxiety. The prognosis is related to the initial cardiac rhythm present during the initiation of resuscitation. Recent progress in the improvement of mortality and neurological outcome has been achieved over the last decade thanks to the systematic implementation of a period of targeted temperature control between 32 and 34 ° C in patients who benefited from the realization of at least one electrical external shock. There are theoretical and clinical arguments to think that achieving the same way a period of targeted temperature control between 32 and 34 ° C in patients treated for cardiac arrest with a non- shockable rhythm on arrival can also benefit from this procedure. However other arguments are against this hypothesis including an increase in the risk of infection , worsening of the patient's hemodynamic status with no benefit to him. To answer this question, we conduce a randomized multicenter study testing the potential improvement of neurological outcome through this procedure targeted temperature control between 32.5 and 33.5 ° C in these patients. IL Ancillary Study of HYPERION Trial will determine impact on inflammatory biomarkers of two temperature target for targeted temperature management (33°C or 37°C) after cardiac arrest in non-shockable rhythm.

NCT ID: NCT02698826 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

Reoxygenation After Cardiac Arrest II (REOX II Study)

REOX II
Start date: April 2016
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The broad objective of this study is to test the association between hyperoxia exposure after resuscitation from cardiac arrest and outcome. After obtaining written informed consent subjects enrolled in REOX II will undergo a rapid faction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) optimization protocol to prevent exposure to hyperoxia. We will compare outcomes between subjects enrolled in REOX I (observational study only) and REOX II (intervention: rapid FiO2 optimization protocol). Our overarching hypothesis is that exposure to hyperoxia after return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) is associated with increased oxidative stress and worsened neurological and cognitive outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT02685618 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

Endothelial Dysfunction in Resuscitated Cardiac Arrest

ENDO-RCA
Start date: February 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Objective: Safety and efficacy of low-dose prostacyclin administration and blood pressure target in addition to standard therapy, as compared to standard therapy alone, in post-cardiac-arrest-syndrome (PCAS) patients.

NCT ID: NCT02684955 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

Non-invasive Neurological Evaluation During CPR

Neuro-E-CPR
Start date: February 2, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cardiac arrest remains a leading cause of death, currently affecting >250,000 Europeans outside the hospital each year. Manual cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) provides between 15 to 30 % of normal blood flow to the heart and brain. For out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) is possible only for 20-40% of patients with trained resuscitation teams. However, only 5-10% of patients will survive with good neurological status. A good quality CPR, a short time before initiation of the resuscitation and a short delay before the first defibrillation have been associated with improved neurological outcome. Unfortunately it is currently impossible to obtain reliable information on the quality of the perfusion and oxygenation of organs during CPR. The current monitoring during CPR is limited to heart rhythm analysis, pulse rate evaluation and end tidal CO2 (EtCO2). The last one is the only parameter which have been linked with probability of ROSC and its value gives no indication of the long-term prognosis nor the neurological status. Cerebral spectroscopy (near-infrared spectroscopy - NIRS) allows to measure with a noninvasive method the local oxygen saturation of the prefrontal cortex (rSO2), reflecting the balance between need and supply of brain oxygenation. This technique has been recently used in cardiac arrest showing a possible association between rSO2 measured during CPR and the occurrence of ROSC or survival. The quantitative measurement of the pupillary light reaction has been described to predict neurological outcome in the hospital for patient successfully reanimated after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Recently, a feasibility study has shown that its use was also possible during CPR in the pre-hospital setting. The investigators aim to study a composite prognostic factor combining quantitative rSO2 and automated pupillometry measured during CPR. The investigators hypothesized that the rate of survival with good neurologic outcome at 30 days will be lower in patients with rSO2 <30% for more than 5 min and an absent pupillary reflex more than 5 min or decreasing during CPR .

NCT ID: NCT02641626 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

Coronariography in OUt of hosPital Cardiac arrEst

COUPE
Start date: January 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Prospective, multicenter, randomized clinical trial. Survivors from an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) without ST segment elevation in their EKG will be recruited. Potentially non-cardiac etiology of the cardiac arrest will be ruled out prior to randomization. Primary goal (treatment): to evaluate the efficacy of urgent vs deferred coronary angiography in survivors from OHCA without ST-segment elevation in the EKG.

NCT ID: NCT02633358 Completed - Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trials

Anti-inflammatory Effect of Therapeutic Hypothermia in Out-hospital Cardiac Arrest Patients With Cardiogenic Shock

Start date: November 1, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Acute myocardial infarction complicated with cardiogenic shock trigger IL-6, the strong inflammatory response, result in multiple organ failure, even death. While therapeutic hypothermia,to expect the possibility of anti-inflammatory effect via IL-6 bi-phasic effect and IL-10 , to improve the multiple organ failure, to increase survival rate and well cerebral performance.