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 Protective head-cooling during cardiac arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation:  the original animal studies Brader EW; Jehle D; Mineo M; Safar PNeurol Int  2010[Jun]; 2 (1): e3Prolonged standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) does not reliably sustain  brain viability during cardiac arrest. Pre-hospital adjuncts to standard CPR are  needed in order to improve outcomes. A preliminary dog study demonstrated that  surface cooling of the head during arrest and CPR can achieve protective levels  of brain hypothermia (30 degrees C) within 10 minutes. We hypothesized that protective  head-cooling during cardiac arrest and CPR improves neurological outcomes. Twelve  dogs under light ketamine-halothane-nitrous oxide anesthesia were arrested by  transthoracic fibrillation. The treated group consisted of six dogs whose shaven  heads were moistened with saline and packed in ice immediately after confirmation  of ventricular fibrillation. Six control dogs remained at room temperature. All  12 dogs were subjected to four minutes of ventricular fibrillation and 20 minutes  of standard CPR. Spontaneous circulation was restored with drugs and  countershocks. Intensive care was provided for five hours post-arrest and the  animals were observed for 24 hours. In both groups, five of the six dogs had  spontaneous circulation restored. After three hours, mean neurological deficit  was significantly lower in the treated group (P=0.016, with head-cooled dogs  averaging 37% and the normothermic dogs 62%). Two of the six head-cooled dogs  survived 24 hours with neurological deficits of 9% and 0%, respectively. None of  the control group dogs survived 24 hours. We concluded that head-cooling  attenuates brain injury during cardiac arrest with prolonged CPR. We review the  literature related to the use of hypothermia following cardiac arrest and discuss  some promising approaches for the pre-hospital setting.ä
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