Abstract
Objective To report the use of sodium bicarbonate (SB) in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) and to explore the role of sodium bicarbonate in resuscitation of OHCA in terms of restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and survival, and existence of dose-dependent relationship, especially in those with prolonged arrest. Design Retrospective cohort study. Setting Emergency department of two regional hospitals in a cluster of Hong Kong. Methods Adult patients aged at least 18 years old who presented to the study centres with non-traumatic OHCA in the period between March 2013 and December 2013 were included. Cases in which resuscitations were considered medically futile or not actually performed were excluded. Those with do-not-resuscitate (DNR) order or advance directives, those who were death before arrival with postmortem changes, and those who developed ROSC before or within 15 minutes of arrival were excluded from the study. Patients with known poisoning from tricyclic antidepressant or other sodium channel blockers were excluded from analysis if any. The primary outcome of this study was ROSC. Other outcome variables included survival to hospital admission (STA) and survival to hospital discharge (STD). Results A total of 489 patients were included during the study period for analysis. We found that patients who received sodium bicarbonate injection (SB group) during CPR had a higher percentage of ROSC than those who did not (no-SB group) (60.8% vs 22.5%; p<0.001). The survival-to-admission rate was higher in the SB group (56.8%) compared with the contrary (21.4%). The difference of survival-to-discharge between the two groups did not reach statistical significance (4.1% in SB group and 2.9% in the no-SB group; p=0.484). The rate of ROSC was found to be dose dependent, being higher in higher dose of SB administration. The ROSC rate increased from no-SB (22.4%) to 57.1% if given 50 ml SB, and further to 64.1% if given ≥100 ml SB. Conclusions Our study shows that the use of sodium bicarbonate in the CPR of OHCA is beneficial in ROSC. The effect is dose dependent, with better results in higher dose (>100 ml) of sodium bicarbonate; however, we fail to demonstrate its benefit for prolonged CPR cases (>30 minutes). (Hong Kong j.emerg. med. 2015;22:281-290)
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