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. 2004 Nov;30(11):2126-8.
doi: 10.1007/s00134-004-2425-z. Epub 2004 Sep 9.

Mode of death after admission to an intensive care unit following cardiac arrest

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Mode of death after admission to an intensive care unit following cardiac arrest

Stephen Laver et al. Intensive Care Med. 2004 Nov.

Abstract

Objective: To determine the mode of death in patients admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU) after cardiac arrest who died before hospital discharge.

Design: Prospectively defined retrospective review of a database and individual patient medical records and ICU charts.

Setting: Eleven-bed multidisciplinary intensive care unit in a general hospital in the United Kingdom.

Patients and participants: All patients admitted to ICU between February 1998 and July 2003 after a cardiac arrest in the previous 24 h.

Measurements and results: The outcome at hospital discharge and mode of death in non-survivors were recorded. Based on the mode of death, non-survivors were placed in one of three groups: multiple organ failure death, neurological death or cardiovascular death. Two hundred and five patients were admitted to ICU after a cardiac arrest; 113 (55.1%) after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and 92 (44.9%) after in-hospital cardiac arrest. One hundred and twenty-six (61.5%) patients died before hospital discharge and of these 58 (46.0%) died due to neurological injury. After cardiac arrest, 22.9% of the in-hospital patients and 67.7% of the out-of-hospital patients died due to neurological injury, irrespective of the primary cardiac arrest arrhythmia.

Conclusions: Two-thirds of the patients dying after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest died due to neurological injury and this proportion was approximately the same for ventricular fibrillation/ventricular tachycardia and pulseless electrical activity/asystole. Approximately a quarter of the patients dying after in-hospital cardiac arrest died due to neurological injury.

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References

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