View clinical trials related to Heart Arrest.
Filter by:RIAC - An Observational, Prospective, Multi-centre, Study of Epidemiology, Treatment, and Outcome of Cardiac Arrest in Italy.
Transient renal insufficiency is frequently observed in the course of cardiovascular arrest. Although elevation of creatinine is reversible in a large majority of cases, severe renal insufficiency is sometimes observed and is associated with a dark prognosis. Any intervention that may limit the worsening of renal function may have an impact on patient mortality. There is currently no validated pharmacological treatment to limit the progression of ARI or to accelerate its recovery. A major challenge then concerns the detection of the reversible character of renal damage. Renal biomarkers have been little studied in the prediction of severe ARI and mortality after cardiac arrest. The combination of TIMP2 (tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase) and insulin-like growth factor binding protein (IGFBP7) in urine showed good diagnostic performance in the early detection of the risk of developing acute renal failure within 12 hours. Measured in the urine, the excretion of these two markers specifically reflects renal tubular lesions. Moreover, their rate seems to be strongly correlated with the severity of the tubular lesions. Thus, it can be reasonably assumed that their very early dosing in post-cardiac arrest could detect the presence and severity of renal tubular lesions. A threshold to be defined would discriminate patients at risk of developing an ARI within 48 hours post ACR and to distinguish between severe transient and severe persistent lesions beyond 72 hours.
There is significant data showing that the quality of CPR performed is quite poor. Recent studies have shown that when real-time visual corrective feedback is available to CPR providers, quality (compression depth and rate) improves. Pilot work at John's Hopkins Children's Hospital indicates that providing a CPR Coach whose role it is to provide real-time coaching during cardiac arrest, further improves the quality of CPR. This study will assess the impact of a CPR Coach for improving CPR quality and CPR perception in a team of healthcare providers during simulated CPA.
The registry enroll all the patients who suffered an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in the Lombardia Region with a follow-up up to ten years after the event.
This study investigates the relationship between optic nerve sheath diameter and increased intracranial pressure and its effect on neurologic outcome in post-cardiopulmonary arrest patients.
The investigators aimed to evaluate the effect of AMCPR (Augmented-Medication CardioPulmonary Resuscitation: administration of additional vasopressin to titrate to arterial diastolic blood pressure over 20 mmHg) on cardiopulmonary resuscitation results and outcomes in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients.
XePOHCAS: Prospective, randomized, multicenter interventional trial in adult subjects with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest comparing treatment with standard-of-care post-cardiac arrest intensive care (which is targeted temperature management [TTM]) to xenon by inhalation plus standard-of-care post-cardiac arrest intensive care (including TTM).
This study aims to examine whether P30 wave of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) is related with outcome after cardiac arrest. The study design is a prospective, multicenter-observational study. Patients survived after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest undergoing hypothermic-targeted temperature management will participate in the study. Relationship of P30 wave of SEP with the neurologic outcome on hospital discharge will be evaluated.
This study seeks to evaluate, whether patients suffering from cardiac arrest, that can be successfully resuscitated, can be differentiated from those, that cannot be resuscitated, using arterial blood pressure values.
The aim of the study is to describe CBF modifications during rewarming after targeted temperature management in cardiac arrest patients