2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2011.01.018
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Repeated magnetic resonance imaging and cerebral performance after cardiac arrest—A pilot study

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Cited by 23 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…In two larger studies, lower whole-brain median ADC and the percentage of brain volume with an ADC value below the threshold of 650-700 9 10 -6 mm 2 /s were significant predictors of poor outcome [63,64]. When using ADC depression as a prognosticator in patients who were cooled after CA, it is important to realize that hypothermia per se can cause ADC depression, as was demonstrated in a rat model and a patient study [65,66]. Therefore, MRI has to be reserved for the rewarming phase, and is ideally performed few days after the arrest.…”
Section: Brain Imaging (Ct-scan and Mri)mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In two larger studies, lower whole-brain median ADC and the percentage of brain volume with an ADC value below the threshold of 650-700 9 10 -6 mm 2 /s were significant predictors of poor outcome [63,64]. When using ADC depression as a prognosticator in patients who were cooled after CA, it is important to realize that hypothermia per se can cause ADC depression, as was demonstrated in a rat model and a patient study [65,66]. Therefore, MRI has to be reserved for the rewarming phase, and is ideally performed few days after the arrest.…”
Section: Brain Imaging (Ct-scan and Mri)mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In brain areas vulnerable to global ischemia, the ADC reduction was time-dependent and differed between patients with good and poor outcomes. [20][21][22] However, no data describe how these patterns change when patients are treated with TH after cardiac arrest. Additionally, no data compare the prognostic value of DWI at different time points after cardiac arrest in the same patients.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These authors found no correlation between initial MRI and outcome or ischemic lesions seen on subsequent 24‐ or 96‐hour MRIs. However, in this study 9 of the 10 patients had a good neurologic outcome, suggesting that this was an unusual cohort of out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest patients 48 . This study used the apparent diffuse coefficient for evaluation of ischemia, whereas a subsequent study 49 of 19 out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest patients evaluated high signal intensity in 21 brain regions on DW‐MRI at 6 hours after return of spontaneous circulation as a predictor of poor neurologic outcome.…”
Section: Imaging Studiesmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Three studies have assessed MRI as a predictive tool when performed within 6 hours after return of spontaneous circulation and before initiation of targeted temperature management. The first study used MRI at 2 hours after return of spontaneous circulation to predict the outcomes of 10 witnessed out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest patients 48 . These authors found no correlation between initial MRI and outcome or ischemic lesions seen on subsequent 24‐ or 96‐hour MRIs.…”
Section: Imaging Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%