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Submitted: 03 Jun 2012
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J Cardiovasc Thorac Res. 2012;4(4): 107-111.
doi: 10.5681/jcvtr.2012.026
PMID: 24250997
PMCID: PMC3825370
  Abstract View: 1049
  PDF Download: 987

Original Article

Serum Cortisol Levels as a Predictor of Neurologic Survival in Successfully Resuscitated Victims of Cardiopulmonary Arrest

Nader Tavakoli 1, Ali Bidari 2, Samad Shams Vahdati 3*

1 Department of Emergency Medicine, Hazrate-Rasul Hospital ,Tehran University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran
2 Department of Emergency Medicine, Sina Hospital ,Tehran University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran
3 Department of Emergency Medicine, Imam Reza Hospital, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran
*Corresponding Author: Email: sshamsv@yahoo.com

Abstract

Introduction: Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is the most stressful lifetime event for the victims and an important issue for the emergency physicians. The status of the hypothalamic pituitary- adrenal axis (HPA) function in successfully resuscitated victims of cardiopulmonary arrest has been recently of an interest for the researchers. Methods: In a prospective cohort study, 50 successfully resuscitated OHCA victims’ serum cortisol levels were measured 5 minutes and 1 hour after return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). The data were analyzed comparing the one-week neurologic survival. Results: Fifty blood samples were obtained for serum cortisol levels after 5 minutes of ROSC. Fourteen patients (28%) pronounced death during one hour after CPR. Blood sample from living 36 patients after one hour post-CPR were obtained for second cortisol assay. Eleven patients (22%) were neurologically survived after one week. Seven patients (14%) were discharged finally from hospital with good neurologic recovery. The serum cortisol levels in both the neurologically surviving and the non-surviving after 5 minutes of ROSC patients were 63.4 ±13.6 and 43.2±25.5(microg/ml), (mean±S.D., respectively) and after 1 hour of ROSC patients’ serum cortisol levels were 64.9±13.1 and 47.3±27.1(microg/ml), (mean±S.D., respectively). The difference was significantly higher in neurologically survived group in both 5 minutes and 1 hour after ROSC (P= 0.015 and 0.013 respectively). Conclusion: serum cortisol levels after 5 minutes and one hour of ROSC in victims of cardiopulmonary arrest are significantly higher in neurologically survived than non-survived patients.
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