Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Not yet recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Anoxic Brain Injury
  • Cardiac Arrest
  • Post Anoxic Coma
Type
Observational
Design
Observational Model: CohortTime Perspective: Prospective

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Cardiorespiratory arrest is associated with high mortality and morbidity rates. The direct consequence of a cardio-circulatory arrest is the absence of blood flow allowing oxygenation of the organs and consequently formation of ischemic lesions. Anoxic cerebral lesions are common in the aftermath of...

Cardiorespiratory arrest is associated with high mortality and morbidity rates. The direct consequence of a cardio-circulatory arrest is the absence of blood flow allowing oxygenation of the organs and consequently formation of ischemic lesions. Anoxic cerebral lesions are common in the aftermath of a cardiac arrest and often lead to the death of patients when active therapies are stopped after a multimodal prognostication that indicates that a poor outcome is very likely. It is of paramount importance to optimize the sensitivity of the prognostication strategy in detecting good neurological outcome. A multimodal approach to the prognostic assessment is essential, and must include at least clinical examination, electrophysiology exploration (electroencephalography and/or evoked potentials) and biomarker analysis. Although the most reliable predictors did not give false positives in most studies, none of them, considered individually, can establish an unfavorable prognosis with an absolute degree of certitude. For these reasons it is interesting to evaluate new prognostication tools. The videopupillometry allows precise, reproducible and repeated measurement of changes in pupil diameter in response to a painful or a luminous stimulus. Pupillary pain reflex analysis is usually used to assess the degree of analgesia in a non-communicative patient during general anesthesia and neuromuscular blockade. The PPI score is determined at the bedside by recording pupillary dilatation after a calibrated and incremented nociceptive stimulus (electrical current between 5 and 60mA) applied to a skin metamere with two electrodes. Automated pupillometry measurement has been recently developed to help support prognostication, with a quantitative pupillary light reflex measurement. The aim of this study is to evaluate the Pupillary Pain Index in the neurological prognosis after a cardiac arrest by correlating the PPI at 48h from the patient's arrival to the CPC score at 3 months.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04336930
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Matthieu Koszutski, Dr Nancy Teaching Hospital, CHU de Nancy