Abstract-Objective:To systematically review outcomes in comatose survivors after cardiac arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Methods: The authors analyzed studies (1966 to 2006) that explored predictors of death or unconsciousness after 1 month or unconsciousness or severe disability after 6 months. Results: The authors identified four class I studies, three class II studies, and five class III studies on clinical findings and circumstances.
Poor outcome in postanoxic coma can be reliably predicted with somatosensory evoked potentials and neuron-specific enolase as early as 24 hours after cardiopulmonary resuscitation in a substantial number of patients.
We studied 28 patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage and normal angiograms. On early CT (within 5 days) in 13 cases, blood was seen mainly or only in the cisterns around the midbrain. This pattern of hemorrhage was found in only 1 of 92 patients with a ruptured aneurysm. None of the unexplained perimesencephalic hemorrhages was associated with intracerebral hematoma or intraventricular hemorrhage. The clinical features also differed from those of aneurysmal hemorrhage; loss of consciousness was rare, and after 3 months, all 13 patients had returned to normal life. The cause of this benign disorder remains elusive, but a venous or capillary source seems likely.
We developed and tested a simple threepoint scale for grading white matter lesions in anterior and posterior regions of the brain. Twenty four CT scans and 24 MRI scans were separately judged by 11 and five observers, respectively, on the presence and severity of white matter lesions. The observers were radiologists and neurologists. For CT scans, these periventricular changes were graded according to their extent as absent, or partly involving the white matter, or extending up to the subcortical region. The MRI lesions were graded as no lesion or only a single one, multiple focal lesions, and multiple confluent lesions. The pairwise agreements of all possible combinations of observers for each scan were corrected for chance (kappa statistics; maximal agreement 1-0). The weighted kappa value, for anterior and posterior regions combined, was 0-63 for CT scans, and 078 for MRI scans. This three-point scale for two separate regions seems suitable as a basis for cross-sectional or longitudinal studies of large series of patients.
According to several studies, the amount of subarachnoid blood on the initial computed tomogram of patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage has predictive value with respect to infarction and outcome. Of several methods for assessing the amount of subarachnoid blood, none has been subjected to a study of interobserver agreement. We describe our own method, applied in previous studies, in which
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