Abstract

Cardiac arrest (CA) results in global ischemia-reperfusion injury damaging tissues in the whole body. The landscape of therapeutic interventions in resuscitation medicine has evolved from focusing solely on achieving return of circulation to now exploring options to mitigate brain injury and preserve brain function after CA. CA pathology includes mitochondrial damage and endoplasmic reticulum stress response, increased generation of reactive oxygen species, neuroinflammation, and neuronal excitotoxic death. Current non-pharmacologic therapies, such as therapeutic hypothermia and extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation, have shown benefits in protecting against ischemic brain injury and improving neurological outcomes post-CA, yet their application is difficult to institute ubiquitously. The current preclinical pharmacopeia to address CA and the resulting brain injury utilizes drugs that often target singular pathways and have been difficult to translate from the bench to the clinic. Furthermore, the limited combination therapies that have been attempted have shown mixed effects in conferring neuroprotection and improving survival post-CA. The global scale of CA damage and its resultant brain injury necessitates the future of CA interventions to simultaneously target multiple pathways and alleviate the hemodynamic, mitochondrial, metabolic, oxidative, and inflammatory processes in the brain. This narrative review seeks to highlight the current field of post-CA neuroprotective pharmaceutical therapies, both singular and combination, and discuss the use of an extensive multi-drug cocktail therapy as a novel approach to treat CA-mediated dysregulation of multiple pathways, enhancing survival, and neuroprotection.

Highlights

  • There are over 356,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) and 209,000 in-hospital cardiac arrests (IHCA) in the United States with the survival to hospital discharge only 12% and 25%, respectively

  • A new shift in Cardiac arrest (CA) treatment can entail the incorporation of a multi-drug cocktail comprising a variety of drugs that can individually and synergistically confer neuroprotection based on their effects on the aforementioned diverse pathophysiological sequelae of CA

  • This review has summarized the current landscape of CA interventions using single drug therapy or a few drug combination therapies to target one or a few pathways to potentiate neuroprotection in both the preclinical and clinical environments

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

There are over 356,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) and 209,000 in-hospital cardiac arrests (IHCA) in the United States with the survival to hospital discharge only 12% and 25%, respectively. In ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest (VFCA) rats, a combination therapy of niacin and selenium reduced ROS generation by enhancing glutathione (GSH) reductase activity and improved the GSH/GSSG ratio, attenuated brain injury, and improved the 7-day neurological outcomes by suppression of mechanisms that would normally increase caspase-mediated cell death [109]. Another major limitation in these combination therapies is the use of very mild

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