Clinical Trial: Prehospital Resuscitation Intranasal Cooling Effects Seen in MRI of the Brain After Cardiac Arrest

Study Status: Active, not recruiting
Recruit Status: Active, not recruiting
Study Type: Observational




Official Title: Prehospital Resuscitation Intranasal Cooling Effects Seen in Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain After Cardiac Arrest

Brief Summary:

Therapeutic hypothermia improves the neurologically-intact survival rates in those patients resuscitated out-of-hospital from ventricular fibrillation. Cooling as early as possible might be beneficial to those victims. Diffusion Tensor Imaging and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging have recently shown to be able to identify early ischemia-related changes within the brain three days after cardiac arrest, among sudden cardiac arrest patients cooled in hospital. The physical changes seen within the brain may be able to distinguish survivors at very early phase.

This study aims to assess early ischemia-related changes of the brain seen in MRI approximately three days after cardiac arrest. The hypotheses is that MRI will differ in the groups of patients treated with early intra-arrest cooling with the RhinoChill device and in hospital hypothermia in 36 Celsius, in the group of patients treated with normal in hospital hypothermia in 36 Celsius only, in the group of patients treated with normal in hospital hypothermia in 33 Celsius only (The historical Xenon study patients). The primary endpoint is the presence and pattern of white matter and gray matter degeneration and volumetric changes of the gray matter, white matter, and cerebro-spinal fluid spaces in MRI, and secondary endpoints are total survival at 90 days, and time to reach a target temperature (≤36/33 Celsius).