Index
Module 12 • Cardiology
Cardiovascular Critical Care II
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Data Tables
Cardiovascular Critical Care II
Patrick M. Wieruszewski ~3 min read Module 12 of 20
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Cardiovascular Critical Care II

(e)Prehospital methylprednisolone in primarily shockable rhythms was studied in a phase II

study and demonstrated significant reductions in inflammatory markers associated with

post-cardiac arrest syndrome (Intensive Care Med 2024;49:1467-78). Further investigation

may be warranted to determine the clinical impact of these findings.

iii.

Antiarrhythmics:

(a)No evidence that, in cardiac arrest, any antiarrhythmics increase survival to discharge.
(b)Conflicting evidence on benefit of amiodarone and lidocaine (Table 3) in the prehospital

arrest situation:

(1)Amiodarone or lidocaine may be considered for VF/pVT that is unresponsive to

defibrillation (Circulation 2019;140:e881-e894).

(2)Investigation has found that amiodarone (300 mg) increased rates of survival to hospital

admission compared to placebo in shock-refractory VF/pVT in those who received at

least 3 shocks and epinephrine (N Engl J Med 1999;341:871-8). Additionally, 5 mg/

kg amiodarone improved survival to hospital admission compared with 1.5 mg/kg

lidocaine (N Engl J Med 2002;346:884-90). These 2 studies did not find evidence of

improved survival to hospital discharge. Additionally, a comparison in patients with

VF/pVT considered refractory after at least 1 shock, which found that ROSC was higher

in patients receiving lidocaine compared with those receiving placebo, but not for those

receiving amiodarone. Survival to hospital admission was higher with amiodarone or

lidocaine compared to placebo, but no difference in survival with good neurological

outcome or survival to hospital discharge in any group (N Engl J Med 2016;374:1711-

22). These drugs may be particularly useful for patients with witnessed arrest, for whom

time to drug administration may be shorter (Circulation 2019;140:e881-e894).

(3)Amiodarone should be administered as undiluted intravenous/intraosseous push if

pulseless. Dosing should be 300 mg with repeat dosing of 150 mg (Table 3).

(4)If pulse is obtained, the suggested dose is 150 mg, which must be given as slow

intravenous piggyback over at least 15 minutes and is typically followed by a continuous

intravenous infusion.

(5)Hemodynamic effects of bradycardia and hypotension may be partly related to
vasoactive solvents (polysorbate 80) (Am J Cardiol 2002;90:853-9).
(c)Magnesium sulfate (Table 3) is effective for cardiac arrest caused by torsades de pointes.

(i.e., caused by early afterdepolarizations during phase 2 of the action potential).

(1)Not effective when VF/pVT is not associated with torsades de pointes.
(2)May consider for emergency magnesium replacement in patients who sustain cardiac

arrest and are hypomagnesemic.

(3)Optimal dosing has not been established.
(d)In patients with non-shockable rhythms that become shockable in OHCA, investigation has

shown some numeric benefit of antiarrhythmics, perhaps warranting further investigation

in this patient group (Circulation 2017;136:2119-31).

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