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Focus on Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Sudden Electrocardiogram Rhythm Changes after Return of Spontaneous Circulation in Porcine Models of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Phenomenological Report

ORCID Icon, , &
Pages 87-91 | Received 15 Aug 2022, Accepted 26 Sep 2022, Published online: 24 Oct 2022
 

Abstract

Background

Observation of the electrocardiogram (ECG) immediately following return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in resuscitated swine has revealed the interesting phenomenon of sudden ECG rhythm changes (SERC) that occur in the absence of pharmacological, surgical, or other medical interventions.

Objective

We sought to identify, quantify, and characterize post-ROSC SERC in successfully resuscitated swine.

Methods

We reviewed all LabChart data from resuscitated approximately 4- to 6-month-old swine used for various experimental protocols from 2006 to 2019. We identified those that achieved sustained ROSC and analyzed their entire post-ROSC periods for evidence of SERC in the ECG, and arterial and venous pressure tracings. Presence or absence of SERC was confirmed independently by two reviewers (ACK, DDS). We measured the interval from ROSC to first SERC, analyzed the following metrics, and calculated the change from 60 sec pre-SERC (or from ROSC if less than 60 sec) to 60 sec post-SERC: heart rate, central arterial pressure (CAP), and central venous pressure (CVP).

Results

A total of 52 pigs achieved and sustained ROSC. Of these, we confirmed at least one SERC in 25 (48.1%). Two pigs (8%) each had two unique SERC events. Median interval from ROSC to first SERC was 3.8 min (inter-quartile range 1.0–6.9 min; range 16 sec to 67.5 min). We observed two distinct types of SERC: type 1) the post-SERC heart rate and arterial pressure increased (72% of cases); and type 2) the post-SERC heart rate and arterial pressure decreased (28% of cases). For type 1 cases, the mean (standard deviation [SD]) heart rate increased by 33.6 (45.7) beats per minute (bpm). The mean (SD) CAP increased by 20.6 (19.2) mmHg. For type 2 cases, the mean (SD) heart rate decreased by 39.7 (62.3) bpm. The mean (SD) CAP decreased by 21.9 (15.6) mmHg.

Conclusions

SERC occurred in nearly half of all cases with sustained ROSC and can occur multiple times per case. First SERC most often occurred within the first 4 minutes following ROSC. Heart rate, CAP, and CVP changed at the moment of SERC. We are proceeding to examine whether this phenomenon occurs in humans post-cardiac arrest and ROSC.

Acknowledgments

Special thanks to James T. Niemann and Scott T. Youngquist for their insights, and invaluable research in consideration of this unique phenomenon.

Disclosure Statement

The authors have nothing to disclose in relation to this report.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported in part by a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to J.J. Menegazzi (R01HL117979) and a grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development also to J.J. Menegazzi (R01HD095894). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and is not an official representation of the views of the NHLBI.

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