1.The impact of different ventilation modalities during initial resuscitation on short-term outcomes in patients with in-hospital cardiac arrest
Zhiwei CHEN ; Yunjie GUAN ; Shujiao ZHANG ; Huihong LYU ; Zhihong LIN
Chinese Journal of Emergency Medicine 2025;34(3):382-388
Objective:To investigate the impact of different ventilation modalities during initial resuscitation on short-term outcomes in adult patients with in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA).Methods:This retrospective study included adult patients (age ≥18 years) admitted to the emergency resuscitation or observation units of our hospital from September 2019 to December 2021. Demographic data, comorbidities, and short-term outcomes of IHCA patients who underwent airway management during resuscitation were recorded. Participants were stratified into non-advanced airway and advanced airway groups based on ventilation modality. The primary outcome was defined as sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) ≥20 min, and secondary outcomes included survival to discharge and favorable neurological status at discharge. Logistic regression analyses were performed to assess the impact of different ventilation modalities on short-term outcomes among adult IHCA patients. and developed a prediction model of ROSC for adult IHCA patients, and its predictive performance was evaluated by the area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver operating characteristic.Results:Among 285 IHCA patients (non-advanced airway: n=75; advanced airway: n=210), 127 achieved ROSC ≥20 min, 51 survived to discharge, and 35 had favorable neurological outcomes. Logistic regression identified ventilation modality, epinephrine dose, and arrest location as independent predictors of ROSC in adult IHCA patients. Advanced airway management demonstrated significantly higher ROSC rates compared to non-advanced interventions ( OR=3.698, 95% CI:1.844-7.419, P<0.001). However, no significant associations were observed between ventilation modalities and survival to discharge ( OR=1.097, 95% CI:0.506-2.376, P=0.815) or favorable neurological outcomes at discharge ( OR=0.548, 95% CI:0.224-1.339, P=0.187). Ventilation modality, epinephrine dose, and arrest location were incorporated as predictors in a multivariable logistic regression model to develop a ROSC prediction model for adult IHCA patients. The discriminative ability of model was evaluated through receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis, yielding an AUC of 0.735 (95% CI:0.678-0.793). Subgroup analyses demonstrated that early advanced airway management significantly enhanced ROSC rates in noncardiac etiology cases, whereas no such benefit was observed in cardiac etiology cases, while this intervention correlated with decreased survival to discharge rates and deteriorated neurological outcomes among survivors. Conclusions:Advanced airway management demonstrated improved ROSC rates in adult IHCA cases, while showing no significant improvement in survival rates or favorable neurological outcomes at discharge. Ventilation modality, epinephrine dose, and arrest location are independent predictors of ROSC. A model integrating these factors exhibits moderate predictive utility for IHCA outcomes.
2.G-CSF mobilizes marrow stem cell to treat ischemia cerebral infarction in rats
Yunxian CHEN ; Ying LU ; Xueyun ZHONG ; Ruiming OU ; Huihong GUAN ; Xuefei HUANG ; Zhongchao HAN
Chinese Journal of Pathophysiology 1986;0(04):-
AIM: To explore whether granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) has the function of curing ischemia cerebral infarction in rats. METHODS: Rat cerebral infarction model was stablished by line occlusion and G-CSF 60 ?g/kg was injected into abdominal cavity an hour later. The technique of TTC and HE staining and immunohistochemistry were used to detect the volume of infarction and pathological change and the infiltration of CD34 positive cells, respectively. RESULTS: The infarction volume of the rat brain was smaller in G-CSF-therapy group than infarction group 24 hours later and the pathological damage is slighter. Both CD34 positive mono-nucleus cells and CD34 positive neuron-like cells were detected in the rat brain of G-CSF-therapy group but not in the control one 24 hours later. CONCLUSIONS: G-CSF can relieve the ischemia degree and reduce the infarction volume. The possible mechanism is that G-CSF plays protection role on the ischemic neuron cells and moblizes stem cells in bone marrow, then stimulates the regeneration and plerosis of brain tissues.

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