Post-cardiac arrest brain injury:patho⁃ physiology and treatmen[t J]. J Neurol Sci,2012,315:1-8.Chalkias, A. & Xanthos, T. Post-cardiac arrest brain injury: pathophysiology and treatment. J Neurol Sci. 315, 1-8 (2012).Chalkias,A.;Xanthos,T..Post-cardiac arrest brain injury: ...
Post-cardiac arrest brain injury: Pathophysiology and treatment Cardiac arrest is a leading cause of death that affects more than a million individuals worldwide every year. Despite the recent advancement in the field o... A Chalkias,T Xanthos - 《Journal of the Neurological Sciences》 被引量:...
Cardiac arrests constitute a leading cause of mortality in the adult population and cardiologists are often tasked with the management of patients following cardiac arrest either as a consultant or primary provider in the cardiac intensive care unit. Familiarity with evidence-based practice for post-ca...
Brain injury, heart dysfunction, systemic inflammation and the underlying disease that caused the cardiac arrest all contribute to the high death rate of patients who initially have their pulse re-started. Collectively, these symptoms are known as post-cardiac arrest syndrome. The largest modern repor...
Liver protects neuron viability and electrocortical activity in post-cardiac arrest brain injury Zhiyong Guo Meixian Yin Xiaoshun He EMBO Molecular Medicine (2024) Death as the extinction of the source of value: the constructivist theory of death as an irreversible loss of moral status Piotr ...
The components of the post-cardiac arrest syndrome comprise post-cardiac arrest brain injury, post-cardiac arrest myocardial dysfunction, the systemic ischemia-reperfusion response and persistent precipitating pathology. Management of the post-cardiac arrest syndrome involves intensive care support with input...
Post-cardiac arrest syndrome (PCAS) presents a multifaceted challenge in clinical practice, characterized by severe neurological injury and high mortality rates despite advancements in management strategies. One of the important critical aspects of PCAS
Results The 4 key components of post-cardiac arrest syndrome were identified as (1) post-cardiac arrest brain injury, (2) post-cardiac arrest myocardial dysfunction, (3) systemic ischaemia/reperfusion response, and (4) persistent precipitating pathology. Conclusions A growing body of knowledge ...
More than 750,000 Europeans suffer cardiac arrest every year and most die before reaching hospital. Among those surviving to hospital admission, approximately 40% will die and the first days of intensive care are critical. Hypoxic-ischemic brain injury is by far the leading cause of death. ...
cardiac arrestCardiac arrest occurs in over 550,000 patients every year in the United States. Survival to hospital discharge occurs in only 12% of arrests, regardless of rhythm, and many survivors experience complications such as anoxic brain injury and poor neurologic function after cardiac arrest....