Home / Research Articles Hub / Hypothermia versus Normothermia after Out-of-Hospi...
🧬 Medicine & Biology OpenAlex

Hypothermia versus Normothermia after Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

📅 Published: June 16, 2021 👤 Josef Dankiewicz, Tobias Cronberg, Gisela Lilja et al. 📖 New England Journal of Medicine 📊 979 citations
AI-Generated Summary

BACKGROUND: Targeted temperature management is recommended for patients after cardiac arrest, but the supporting evidence is of low certainty. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with coma after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, targeted hypothermia did not lead to a lower incidence of death by 6 months than targeted normothermia.

⚡ This is an original paraphrased summary — not copied from the abstract. Full paper available at the source link below.

Key Findings
  • 1 METHODS: In an open-label trial with blinded assessment of outcomes, we randomly assigned 1900 adults with coma who had had an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest of presumed cardiac or unknown cause to undergo targeted hypothermia at 33°C, followed by controlled rewarming, or targeted normothermia with early treatment of fever (body temperature, ≥37.8°C).
  • 2 The primary outcome was death from any cause at 6 months.
  • 3 Secondary outcomes included functional outcome at 6 months as assessed with the modified Rankin scale.
Why It Matters

Understanding this could lead to better treatments, improved diagnostics, or a deeper grasp of how the human body works — benefiting patient care globally.

This summary is based on publicly available metadata and abstract. For the full research paper, visit the original source:

Read Full Paper at OpenAlex
More Medicine & Biology Papers ← Back to Hub 📚 Learning Hub