rEduction of oXygen After Cardiac arresT: a Pilot Study
Heart ArrestThis Phase 2 study aims to determine the feasibility of paramedic titration of oxygen delivery in adult patients who have been resuscitated from OHCA.
The Haemodynamic Effects of Mechanical Standard and Active Chest Compression-decompression During...
Cardiac ArrestThe aim of this randomized out-of-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation study is to investigate haemodynamics generated by the standard mechanical external chest compression device (LUCAS™ 2) compared to a new version generating chest compressions and active decompression above the initial starting position of the suction cup (LUCAS™ 2AD).
Intraosseous vs Intravenous Access for Cardiac Arrest Treatment
Cardiac ArrestIn patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Singapore, investigators aim to assess the benefit of introducing a resuscitation protocol including the use of intravenous (IV) access and/or intraosseous (IO) vascular access in the pre-hospital setting. The assumption is that low vascular access rates could be due to difficulty of setting IV cannulas in the field due to certain factors like poor lighting or space constraints. Thus, by introducing a protocol including IO access for difficult IV cases, success rates for vascular access will be higher and this might lead to higher survival rates. This will be a study comparing 'IV+IO' and 'IV alone' protocols in patients with cardiac arrest managed by Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) emergency ambulance service. The trial will recruit 400 patients over 1 year. Each of the 30 SCDF ambulances will provide both 'IV+IO' and 'IV alone' treatments in 2 consecutive phases of 6-months in order to allow for all ambulance crew a chance to be trained on usage of IO. Currently, IO insertion is the accepted standard of care in Singapore General Hospital, Department of Emergency Medicine.
Tracheal Intubation vs. Bag-valve-mask Ventilation in Patients With Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest...
Out-of-hospital Cardiac ArrestThe aim of this study is to improve the management of patients in cardiac arrest, and this by comparing two initial airway management methods: Tracheal intubation and bag-valve-mask ventilation. The survival rate at 28-day with favorable neurological function will be compared in the tracheal intubation group versus the bag-valve-mask group
Antibiotherapy During Therapeutic Hypothermia to Prevent Infectious Complications
Ventilator-associated PneumoniaCardiac Arrests With Shockable Rhythm2 moreMild therapeutic hypothermia is currently recommended in management of cardiac arrests with shockable rhythm. In mechanically ventilated patients who were resuscitated after out-of-hospital cardiac arrests, mild therapeutic hypothermia side effects are conductive for infectious complications and especially for ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP). Despite high incidence of VAP and other infectious complications, it is not currently recommended to use antibiotic prophylaxis on the responsible germs. Yet VAP incidence could be decreased if an antibiotic therapy was systematically given to patient treated with mild therapeutic hypothermia after a cardiac arrest. Several retrospective studies showed less infectious complications but also decreased morbidity and mortality related to these complications when antibiotic therapy was given early to patients treated with therapeutic hypothermia after cardiac arrest.
TELSTAR: Treatment of ELectroencephalographic STatus Epilepticus After Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation...
Cardiac ArrestAnoxic Encephalopathy1 moreThe purpose of this study is to estimate the effect of medical treatment of electro-encephalographic status epilepticus on neurological outcome of patients with postanoxic encephalopathy after cardiac arrest.
A Pilot Study of Intra-arrest Therapeutic Hypothermia in Patients Suffering Non-Traumatic Out of...
Out-of-Hospital Cardiac ArrestThe objective of this study will be to assess the frequency of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), survival to admission, survival to discharge from the hospital, and neurologic function at time of discharge from the hospital among patients experiencing out of hospital cardiac arrest randomized to receive either intra-arrest induction of therapeutic hypothermia (IATH) or post-arrest therapeutic hypothermia (TH).
Duration of Hypothermia for Neuroprotection After Pediatric Cardiac Arrest
Cardiac ArrestBrain InjuryIn this study, children who survive cardiac arrest will be evaluated whether 24 or 72 hours of whole body hypothermia (cooling) during recovery is better to help prevent brain injury and improve outcome. The investigators will also test the safety of cooling patients for 24 and 72 hours. The investigators hypothesize that 72 hours of cooling will be more beneficial than 24 hours without compromising safety.
Effect of Xenon and Therapeutic Hypothermia, on the Brain and on Neurological Outcome Following...
Ischemic Brain InjuryThe main purpose of this study is to explore whether xenon is neuroprotective in humans. In addition, the purpose is to explore the underlying mechanisms for the possible synergistic neuroprotective interaction of xenon and hypothermia in patients suffering cerebral ischemia post cardiac arrest, by undertaking brain imaging to evaluate their effects on cerebral hypoxia, neuronal loss and mitochondrial dysfunction. In addition, the investigators aim to correlate these findings with neurological outcome to determine surrogate markers of favourable clinical outcome at six months.
Pre-ROSC Intra-Nasal Cooling Effectiveness
Cardiac ArrestThe purpose of the study was to demonstrate the safety and feasibility of early intranasal cooling prior to return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in the emergency medical services (EMS) environment. It was hypothesized that cooling during the resuscitation attempt would increase ROSC and subsequent survival. The study was not powered to demonstrate statistically-significant differences in any outcome parameter, but was intended as an exploratory study only.