TY - JOUR
T1 - Neuroprognostication after cardiac arrest
T2 - What the cardiologist should know
AU - Kondziella, Daniel
N1 - © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: [email protected].
PY - 2023/8/24
Y1 - 2023/8/24
N2 - Two aspects are a key to mastering prognostication of comatose cardiac arrest survivors: a detailed knowledge about the clinical trajectories of consciousness recovery (or lack thereof) and the ability to correctly interpret the results of multimodal investigations, which include clinical examination, electroencephalography, neuroimaging, evoked potentials, and blood biomarkers. While the very good and the very poor ends of the clinical spectrum typically do not pose diagnostic challenges, the intermediate 'grey zone' of post-cardiac arrest encephalopathy requires cautious interpretation of the available information and sufficiently long clinical observation. Late recovery of coma patients with initially ambiguous diagnostic results is increasingly reported, as are unresponsive patients with various forms of residual consciousness, including so-called cognitive motor dissociation, rendering prognostication of post-anoxic coma highly complex. The aim of this paper is to provide busy clinicians with a high-yield, concise overview of neuroprognostication after cardiac arrest, emphasizing notable developments in the field since 2020.
AB - Two aspects are a key to mastering prognostication of comatose cardiac arrest survivors: a detailed knowledge about the clinical trajectories of consciousness recovery (or lack thereof) and the ability to correctly interpret the results of multimodal investigations, which include clinical examination, electroencephalography, neuroimaging, evoked potentials, and blood biomarkers. While the very good and the very poor ends of the clinical spectrum typically do not pose diagnostic challenges, the intermediate 'grey zone' of post-cardiac arrest encephalopathy requires cautious interpretation of the available information and sufficiently long clinical observation. Late recovery of coma patients with initially ambiguous diagnostic results is increasingly reported, as are unresponsive patients with various forms of residual consciousness, including so-called cognitive motor dissociation, rendering prognostication of post-anoxic coma highly complex. The aim of this paper is to provide busy clinicians with a high-yield, concise overview of neuroprognostication after cardiac arrest, emphasizing notable developments in the field since 2020.
KW - Biomarkers
KW - Cardiologists
KW - Coma/diagnosis
KW - Heart Arrest/complications
KW - Humans
KW - Prognosis
KW - Coma
KW - Intensive care
KW - Consciousness
KW - Disorders of consciousness
KW - Cardiac arrest
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85170254392&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/ehjacc/zuad019
DO - 10.1093/ehjacc/zuad019
M3 - Review
C2 - 36866627
SN - 2048-8726
VL - 12
SP - 550
EP - 558
JO - European heart journal. Acute cardiovascular care
JF - European heart journal. Acute cardiovascular care
IS - 8
ER -