Cases reported "Heart Arrest"

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1/165. Coronary spasm and cardiac arrest from carcinoid crisis during laser bronchoscopy.

    Bronchoscopic manipulation of an endobronchial carcinoid can precipitate a carcinoid crisis. Coronary artery spasm is an uncommon manifestation of carcinoid crisis, and has never been reported as a complication of flexible bronchoscopy. We report a case of a 10-year-old girl who developed coronary artery spasm and cardiac arrest during neodymiumyttrium aluminum garnet (Nd-YAG) laser photoresection of an endobronchial carcinoid. Recognition of this unusual presentation of a carcinoid crisis is important as the treatment approach differs from standard resuscitation protocols.
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ranking = 1
keywords = coronary
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2/165. theophylline therapy for near-fatal cheyne-stokes respiration. A case report.

    BACKGROUND: cheyne-stokes respiration is characterized by periodic breathing that alternates with hypopnea or apnea. OBJECTIVE: To describe the effect of theophylline on near-fatal cheyne-stokes respiration. DESIGN: Case report. SETTING: Tertiary referral center. PATIENT: A 48-year-old diabetic woman with a history of three cardiorespiratory arrests, a normal coronary arteriogram, normal left ventricular function, and severe cheyne-stokes respiration. MEASUREMENTS: oxygen saturation, intra-arterial blood pressure, central venous pressure, chest wall movement, electrocardiography, electromyography, electroencephalography, electro-oculography, minute ventilation, arterial blood gases, and serum theophylline levels. RESULTS: After intravenous administration of 1.2 mg of theophylline at 0.6 mg/kg per hour (serum level, 5.6 microg/mL), both cheyne-stokes respiration and oxygen desaturation were markedly attenuated. After infusion of 2.4 mg of theophylline (serum level, 11.6 microg/mL), cheyne-stokes respiration resolved completely. No change was seen with placebo. cheyne-stokes respiration did not recur during outpatient treatment with oral theophylline. CONCLUSION: theophylline may be a rapid and effective therapy for life-threatening cheyne-stokes respiration.
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ranking = 1
keywords = coronary
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3/165. Emergency cardiopulmonary bypass for cardiac arrest refractory to pediatric advanced life support.

    We report the application of emergent cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) for three pediatric patients in the cardiac catheterization laboratory with cardiac arrest who did not respond to conventional resuscitation efforts. All three patients had return of baseline prearrest rhythms within minutes of the initiation of artificial cardiopulmonary support and the return of spontaneous circulation upon weaning CPB. Two patients had normal neurologic outcomes despite an interval of over 30 minutes from arrest to CPB. The continued judicious application and study of this technology in a small subpopulation of pediatric cardiac arrest patients is warranted.
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ranking = 0.80031224468525
keywords = circulation
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4/165. Preliminary experience with a percutaneous cardiopulmonary support system.

    Percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass has been introduced to support circulation in critical patients. In our preliminary experience we resuscitated two patients who sustained a prolonged cardiac arrest (52 min. and 31 min.) after coronary angiography and elective cardiac surgery, respectively. Cannulation was achieved percutaneously within 10 min. in both cases. Pump flow ranged from 2 to 31/m. Total support lasted from 52 min. to 180 min.. Both patients were successfully weaned. Patient 1 was declared brain dead and expired 17 days later. Patient 2 was discharged from the hospital and is doing well. Cannulation was attempted in a third patient after 30 min. of cardiac arrest. Despite surgical cut down of the femoral vessels, it was impossible to advance the arterial cannula because of bilateral occlusive disease. We conclude that PCPS is a powerful technique in selected patients to recover a stable cardiac function after prolonged cardiac arrest.
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ranking = 1.8003122446852
keywords = coronary, circulation
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5/165. The management of non-traumatic cardiac arrest in the operating room with cardiopulmonary bypass.

    We present a case of a 29-year-old woman whom, while undergoing an elective gynecological procedure, acutely arrested. Closed chest cardiopulmonary compressions were not effective. Fortuitously, the cardiac surgical team was in an adjacent operating room, about to start an elective bypass case. After sternotomy, the patient was placed on cardiopulmonary bypass within 20 min of the arrest. The patient achieved return of spontaneous circulation and was ultimately discharged with only mild extremity weakness. The etiology of the arrest was never fully explained. Open chest massage and cardiopulmonary bypass should be considered early in the management of unexpected cardiac arrest, especially in the operating room where surgical expertise should be immediately available. Surgeons and anesthesiologists need to be aware of, and consider, the possibility of employing these techniques.
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ranking = 0.80031224468525
keywords = circulation
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6/165. Sudden death and cerebral anoxia in a young woman with congenital ostial stenosis of the left main coronary artery.

    We report a 36-year-old woman with ventricular fibrillation, subsequent sudden clinical cardiac death, and a prolonged brain anoxia. After a successful resuscitation coronary angiography revealed congenital ostial left main coronary artery (LMCA) stenosis. Surgical anastomosis of the left internal mammary artery (LIMA) to LAD led to a complete recovery. Postoperative electrophysiological examination, mainly programmed ventricular stimulation, failed to excite any rhythm disturbances. Cathet. Cardiovasc. Intervent. 48:67-70, 1999.
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ranking = 6
keywords = coronary
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7/165. Cardiac arrest during exercise: anomalous left coronary artery from the pulmonary trunk.

    Anomalous origin of the left coronary artery from the pulmonary trunk is associated with high mortality in infancy but in rare cases the condition is diagnosed in adults. The present report describes three adult cases of this anomaly. Two of the patients (age 18 and 34 years) were resuscitated from cardiac arrest, which had occurred in relation to physical exercise. The third patient (20 years) had presented with angina pectoris and signs of ischaemia on exercise ECG. In all patients, coronary arteriography revealed a large right coronary artery with collateral filling of the left coronary artery, which originated from the pulmonary trunk. A successful surgical correction of the anomalous coronary artery was performed in two of the patients.
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ranking = 9
keywords = coronary
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8/165. Successful resuscitation of a verapamil-intoxicated patient with percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass.

    OBJECTIVE: To describe our experience with the use of percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass as a therapy for cardiac arrest in an adult patient intoxicated with verapamil. DESIGN: Case report. SETTING: Emergency department of a university hospital. PATIENT: A patient with cardiac arrest after severe verapamil intoxication. INTERVENTIONS: Percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass and theophylline therapy. CASE REPORT: A 41-yr-old white male had taken 4800-6400 mg of verapamil in a suicide attempt. On arrival of the ambulance physician, the patient was conscious with weak palpable pulses and was transported to a nearby hospital. The patient developed a pulseless electrical activity, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation was started. Despite all advanced life support efforts, the patient remained in cardiac arrest. Therefore, he was transferred under ongoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation to our department, where percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass was initiated immediately (2.5 hrs after cardiac arrest). The first verapamil serum concentration obtained at admittance to our institution was 630 ng/mL. After several ineffective intravenous epinephrine applications, the administration of 0.48 g of theophylline as an intravenous bolus 6 hrs and 18 mins after cardiac arrest led to the return of spontaneous circulation. The patient remained stable and was transferred to an intensive care unit the same day. He woke up on the 12th day and was extubated on the 18th day. After transfer to a neuropsychiatric rehabilitation hospital, he recovered totally. CONCLUSION: In patients with cardiac arrest attributable to massive verapamil overdose, percutaneous extracorporeal cardiopulmonary bypass can provide adequate tissue perfusion and sufficient cerebral oxygen supply until the drug level is reduced and restoration of spontaneous circulation can be achieved.
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ranking = 1.6006244893705
keywords = circulation
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9/165. Acute fatal vasoplegia and asystole induced by intravenous amiodarone after cardiopulmonary bypass in a patient with preoperative cardiogenic shock.

    Single dose intravenous amiodarone has been widely used and shown to be effective to treat supraventricular and ventricular arrhythemias in cardiac surgery. We, herein, report a 60-year-old female patient, sustaining cardiogenic shock in the course of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) for unstable angina unrelieved by medication including nitroglycerin, succumbed to a life-saving emergent coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) operation at the end of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) following a 180 mg bolus dose of amiodarone (3 mg/kg) directed at the ventricular arrhythmias, triggered by protamine and unresponsive to lidocaine treatment. Amiodaroneinduced asystole and vasoplegia were thought to be the causation of the failure of resuscitation. The causes of the development of these complications, the potential hazards of its use and the management relative to the consequential complications are reviewed and discussed.
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ranking = 2
keywords = coronary
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10/165. Reversible left anterior descending artery spasm, prolonged cardiac arrest and left main thrombosis during a PTCA attempt of the circumflex artery.

    The authors report a case of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty of the circumflex artery complicated by occlusion of the non-diseased left anterior descending artery by spasm. During advanced cardiac life support, required for the subsequent cardiac arrest, intra-coronary nitrates and calcium antagonists were administered. After 45 minutes, the spasm resolved, but N probably as a result of prolonged blood stasis N a thrombus appeared in the left main artery. While attempting to stent the left main, the thrombus was mechanically dislodged, leaving the epicardial coronary tree free, with a good flow.
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ranking = 3
keywords = coronary
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