Impact of inhaled sedation on delirium incidence and neurological outcome after cardiac arrest – A propensity-matched control study (Isocare)
Poor neurological outcome is common following a cardiac arrest. The use of volatile anesthetic agents has been proposed during post-resuscitation to improve outcome. To determine the effects of inhaled isoflurane on neurological outcome, delirium incidence, ICU length-of-stay, ventilation duration,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Resuscitation 2024-10, Vol.203, p.110358, Article 110358 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Poor neurological outcome is common following a cardiac arrest. The use of volatile anesthetic agents has been proposed during post-resuscitation to improve outcome.
To determine the effects of inhaled isoflurane on neurological outcome, delirium incidence, ICU length-of-stay, ventilation duration, mortality during post-resuscitation care of ICU patients.
510 patients were admitted within our medical ICU following a cardiac arrest during the study period, 401 of them being sedated using intravenous sedation prior to 2017 and 109 of them using inhaled isoflurane according to a standardized protocol following 2017.
Matched-pair analysis depicted a delirium incidence decrease, without improved neurologic outcome on ICU discharge (CPC ≤ 2) for isoflurane patients (16.1% vs 32.2%, p 0.03 and 29% vs 23%, p 0.47, respectively). Ventilation duration and ICU length of stay were shorter for isoflurane patients (78 vs 167 h, p 0.01 and 7.9 vs 8.5 days, p 0.01 respectively). Isoflurane had no impact on mortality.
In this propensity-matched control study, isoflurane sedation during the post-resuscitation care of ICU patients was associated with a lower incidence of delirium, a shorter duration of mechanical ventilation and a reduced ICU length of stay. Prospective data are needed before its widespread use. |
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ISSN: | 0300-9572 1873-1570 1873-1570 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2024.110358 |