Abstract

Most patients who are successfully resuscitated after cardiac arrest are initially comatose and require mechanical ventilation and other organ support in an ICU. Knowledge about the optimal strategy for treating these patients is evolving rapidly. This review will summarize the evidence on key aspects of postarrest care and prognostication, with a focus on actionable parameters that may impact patient survival and neurologic outcomes. Optimal targets for arterial blood oxygen and carbon dioxide in comatose postcardiac arrest patients remain uncertain. Observational data are conflicting and the few randomized controlled trials to date have failed to show that different ranges of blood oxygen and carbon dioxide values impact on biomarkers of neurological injury. The Targeted Temperature Management 2 (TTM-2) trial has documented no difference in 6-month mortality among comatose postcardiac arrest patients managed at 33 oC versus controlled normothermia. An extensive systematic review of the evidence on prognostication of outcome among comatose postcardiac arrest patients underpins new prognostication guidelines. Clinical guidelines for postresuscitation care have recently been updated and incorporate all the available science supporting the treatment of postcardiac arrests. At a minimum, fever should be strictly avoided in comatose postcardiac patients. Prognostication must involve multiple modalities and should not be attempted until assessment confounders have been sufficiently excluded.

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