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American Heart Association

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Final ID: Sat205

Association of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Strategies with Diffuse Optical Measurements of Cerebral Hemodynamics

Abstract Body: Introduction
Hemodynamic-directed cardiopulmonary resuscitation (HD-CPR) targets blood pressure (BP) goals during resuscitation and has shown improved outcomes compared to conventional algorithmic CPR. However, the relationship between specific BP targets and cerebral health remains poorly understood. Objective: Evaluate the association of intra- and post-arrest cerebral hemodynamics, assessed using non-invasive optical neuromonitoring, with CPR strategies that include higher and lower target HD-CPR and algorithmic CPR.
Hypothesis
Higher target HD-CPR will result in increased crerebral oxygenation (StO2) and relative blood flow (rCBF) and blood volume (rCBV) compared to lower target HD-CPR or algorithmic CPR.
Methods
Invasive BP monitoring and non-invasive optical neuromonitoring were performed in a pediatric swine model of asphyxia-associated cardiac arrest. After baseline (5 min) and asphyxia (7 min), ventricular fibrillation was induced. Animals were randomized to 1) high target HD-CPR with a goal systolic BP of 110 and diastolic BP of 45 mmHg (n=15), 2) low target HD-CPR with a goal systolic BP of 80 and diastolic BP of 30 mmHg (n=15), or 3) algorithmic depth-directed CPR (n=15). During HD-CPR, vasopressor administration was titrated to BP goals versus protocolized administration every 4 min in algorithmic CPR. After 15 min of CPR, animals were eligible for defibrillation. Animals achieving return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) were monitored for 4 hours post-ROSC. A Kruskal Wallis test compared cerebral hemodynamics between groups during baseline, asphyxia (7th min), CPR (15th min), and post-ROSC (10, 60, and 240th min). Since not all subjects achieved HD-CPR goals intra-arrest, a secondary analysis compared subjects where mean BP in the 10-15th min of CPR was at goal.
Results
No intra- or post-arrest group differences were observed in StO2, rCBV, rCBF, and MAP (p>0.05; Fig. 1). In the secondary analysis of HD-CPR animals that achieved goal BP, StO2 was higher in the high (n=8) vs. low (n=10) target BP groups (median [IQR]: 36.5 [32.9, 38.9] vs. 27.8 [20.1, 35.2], p=0.03).
Discussion
In our primary intention-to-treat analysis, no differences were observed between CPR strategies. However, high BP target HD-CPR that achieved BP goals increased cerebral oxygenation. This reinforces the established association between BP and cerebral oxygenation. Future work is needed to optimize HD-CPR strategies to consistently achieve higher blood pressures.
  • Anderson, Darci  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Gaudio, Hunter  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Morton, Sarah  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Menezes Forti, Rodrigo  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Baker, Wesley  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Kilbaugh, Todd  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Morgan, Ryan  ( Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Ko, Tiffany  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Herrmann, Jeremy  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Senthil, Kumaran  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Crozier, Aidan  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Mason, Mckenna  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Seeney, Alyssa  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Ranieri, Nicolina  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Goto, Rika  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Krishna, Akshatha  ( Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , United States )
  • Author Disclosures:
    Darci Anderson: DO have relevant financial relationships ; Employee:The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia:Active (exists now) | Hunter Gaudio: No Answer | Sarah Morton: No Answer | Rodrigo Menezes Forti: No Answer | Wesley Baker: No Answer | Todd Kilbaugh: No Answer | Ryan Morgan: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Tiffany Ko: No Answer | Jeremy Herrmann: No Answer | Kumaran Senthil: No Answer | Aidan Crozier: No Answer | McKenna Mason: No Answer | Alyssa Seeney: No Answer | Nicolina Ranieri: No Answer | Rika Goto: No Answer | Akshatha Krishna: No Answer
Meeting Info:

Resuscitation Science Symposium 2025

2025

New Orleans, Louisiana

Session Info:

Basic Science/Translational (General)

Saturday, 11/08/2025 , 05:15PM - 06:45PM

ReSS25 Poster Session and Reception

More abstracts from these authors:
Differences in Cerebral and Somatic Hemodynamics during Asphyxia and Cardiac Arrest and Associations with Return of Spontaneous Circulation

Ko Tiffany, Schulz Alexis, Crozier Aidan, Kenna Sarah, Zuckerberg Gabriel, Mazandi Vanessa, Kirschen Matthew, Baker Wesley, Kilbaugh Todd, Morgan Ryan, Anderson Darci, Senthil Kumaran, Herrmann Jeremy, Silva Luiz, Sueishi Takayuki, Menezes Forti Rodrigo, Seeney Alyssa, Bayle Briston

Association of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Strategies with Diffuse Optical Measurements of Cerebral Hemodynamics

Anderson Darci, Gaudio Hunter, Morton Sarah, Menezes Forti Rodrigo, Baker Wesley, Kilbaugh Todd, Morgan Ryan, Ko Tiffany, Herrmann Jeremy, Senthil Kumaran, Crozier Aidan, Mason Mckenna, Seeney Alyssa, Ranieri Nicolina, Goto Rika, Krishna Akshatha

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