Journal article

Arterial hyperoxia and in-hospital mortality after resuscitation from cardiac arrest

R Bellomo, M Bailey, GM Eastwood, A Nichol, D Pilcher, GK Hart, MC Reade, M Egi, DJ Cooper

Critical Care | BMC | Published : 2011

Abstract

Introduction: Hyperoxia has recently been reported as an independent risk factor for mortality in patients resuscitated from cardiac arrest. We examined the independent relationship between hyperoxia and outcomes in such patients.Methods: We divided patients resuscitated from nontraumatic cardiac arrest from 125 intensive care units (ICUs) into three groups according to worst PaO2 level or alveolar-arterial O2 gradient in the first 24 hours after admission. We defined 'hyperoxia' as PaO2 of 300 mmHg or greater, 'hypoxia/poor O2 transfer' as either PaO2 < 60 mmHg or ratio of PaO2 to fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2 ) < 300, 'normoxia' as any value between hypoxia and hyperoxia and 'isolated ..

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Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We thank all data collectors in the 125 participating ICUs in Australia and New Zealand for their collection of high-quality data that made this study possible. Three of the investigators (MB, RB, DJC) are supported in part by an enabling grant from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.