Chapter 69
Neurologic Assessment and Prognosis after Cardiopulmonary Arrest
States of Consciousness after Cardiac Arrest
States of consciousness fall along a spectrum, with coma at one end and normal consciousness at the other. Patients who are in coma exhibit no responses to external stimuli other than reflexive behavior. Their eyes are closed and sleep-wake cycles are absent. Coma is usually prolonged—lasting for at least hours to days, but rarely permanent—eventually progressing either to death or to a higher level of consciousness. In the United States, brain death (death by neurologic criteria) refers to the irreversible cessation of whole-brain activity and is legally equivalent to cardiac death. Brain death is a clinical diagnosis whose cardinal features are coma, apnea, and absence of all other brain stem reflexes (Chapter 68). Those who recover from coma progress through a vegetative state, which is distinguished from coma by the presence of episodic eye opening and sleep-wake cycles. Patients in a vegetative state may turn their heads to auditory or tactile stimuli and may produce unintelligible sounds; however, they do not follow commands or exhibit purposeful movements, such as pulling a limb away from painful stimuli. When the vegetative state lasts for more than one month it is termed a persistent vegetative state, and when it lasts for more than one year it is termed a permanent vegetative state. Those who recover further enter a minimally conscious state, characterized by limited awareness of and responsiveness to their environment. In this state, patients inconsistently may track visual stimuli with their eyes, obey simple commands, reach for objects, and at times exhibit purposeful behavior such as crying or smiling. Although somewhat artificial, categorizing level of consciousness may be helpful in assessing the severity of brain injury and in charting the course of neurologic recovery.
Determination of Neurologic Prognosis after Cardiac Arrest
Many studies have assessed predictors of outcome in the comatose patient after CPR. Most have been retrospective analyses of a cohort of patients. The outcomes measured have usually been overall patient survival and neurologic recovery. The degrees of recovery and level of neurologic function were defined similarly (Table 69.1). Predictors of outcome that have been studied include neurologic signs followed sequentially postarrest, circumstances of arrest, electrophysiologic studies, brain imaging, and biochemical markers.
TABLE 69.1
Level | Description |
No recovery | Coma until death |
Vegetative state | Eyes-open wakefulness without evidence of cognitive awareness |
Severe disability | Conscious but dependent on others for performing ADLs |
Moderate disability | Conscious but unable to resume the prior level of activity (but not dependent on others for ADLs) |
Good recovery | Resumes prior level of activity and function |
Data from Levy DE, Caronna JJ, Singer BH, et al: Predicting outcome from hypoxic-ischemic coma. JAMA 253:1420-1426, 1985.
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