Booth Christopher M, Boone Robert H, Tomlinson George, Detsky Allan S
Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
JAMA. 2004 Feb 18;291(7):870-9. doi: 10.1001/jama.291.7.870.
Most survivors of cardiac arrest are comatose after resuscitation, and meaningful neurological recovery occurs in a small proportion of cases. Treatment can be lengthy, expensive, and often difficult for families and caregivers. Physical examination is potentially useful in this clinical scenario, and the information obtained may help physicians and families make accurate decisions about treatment and/or withdrawal of care.
To determine the precision and accuracy of the clinical examination in predicting poor outcome in post-cardiac arrest coma.
We searched MEDLINE for English-language articles (1966-2003) using the terms coma, cardiac arrest, prognosis, physical examination, sensitivity and specificity, and observer variation. Other sources came from bibliographies of retrieved articles and physical examination textbooks. Studies were included if they assessed the precision and accuracy of the clinical examination in prognosis of post-cardiac arrest coma in adults. Eleven studies, involving 1914 patients, met our inclusion criteria.
Two authors independently reviewed each study to determine eligibility, abstract data, and classify methodological quality using predetermined criteria. Disagreement was resolved by consensus.
Summary likelihood ratios (LRs) were calculated from random effects models. Five clinical signs were found to strongly predict death or poor neurological outcome: absent corneal reflexes at 24 hours (LR, 12.9; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.0-68.7), absent pupillary response at 24 hours (LR, 10.2; 95% CI, 1.8-48.6), absent withdrawal response to pain at 24 hours (LR, 4.7; 95% CI, 2.2-9.8), no motor response at 24 hours (LR, 4.9; 95% CI, 1.6-13.0), and no motor response at 72 hours (LR, 9.2; 95% CI, 2.1-49.4). The proportion of individuals' dying or having a poor neurological outcome was calculated by pooling the outcome data from the 11 studies (n = 1914) and used as an estimate of the pretest probability of poor outcome. The random effects estimate of poor outcome was 77% (95% CI, 72%-80%). The highest LR increases the pretest probability of 77% to a posttest probability of 97% (95% CI, 87%-100%). No clinical findings were found to have LRs that strongly predicted good neurological outcome.
Simple physical examination maneuvers strongly predict death or poor outcome in comatose survivors of cardiac arrest. The most useful signs occur at 24 hours after cardiac arrest, and earlier prognosis should not be made by clinical examination alone. These data provide prognostic information, rather than treatment recommendations, which must be made on an individual basis incorporating many other variables.
大多数心脏骤停幸存者复苏后处于昏迷状态,只有一小部分患者能实现有意义的神经功能恢复。治疗过程可能漫长、昂贵,且常常给患者家属和护理人员带来困难。体格检查在这种临床情况下可能有用,所获得的信息有助于医生和家属对治疗和/或停止治疗做出准确决策。
确定临床检查在预测心脏骤停后昏迷患者不良预后方面的准确性和精确性。
我们使用“昏迷”“心脏骤停”“预后”“体格检查”“敏感性和特异性”以及“观察者变异”等术语在MEDLINE中检索了1966年至2003年的英文文章。其他来源包括检索到的文章的参考文献和体格检查教科书。纳入的研究需评估临床检查在成人心脏骤停后昏迷预后中的准确性和精确性。11项研究,涉及1914例患者,符合我们的纳入标准。
两位作者独立审查每项研究,以确定其是否符合纳入标准、提取数据,并使用预先确定的标准对方法学质量进行分类。分歧通过协商解决。
从随机效应模型计算汇总似然比(LRs)。发现有5种临床体征可强烈预测死亡或不良神经功能结局:24小时时角膜反射消失(LR,12.9;95%置信区间[CI],2.0 - 68.7)、24小时时瞳孔反应消失(LR,10.2;95%CI,1.8 - 48.6)、24小时时对疼痛无退缩反应(LR,4.7;95%CI,2.2 - 9.8)、24小时时无运动反应(LR,4.9;95%CI,1.6 - 13.0)以及72小时时无运动反应(LR,9.2;95%CI,2.1 - 49.4)。通过汇总11项研究(n = 1914)的结局数据计算个体死亡或出现不良神经功能结局的比例,并将其用作不良结局的验前概率估计值。不良结局的随机效应估计值为77%(95%CI,72% - 80%)。最高的LR将77%的验前概率提高到97%的验后概率(95%CI,87% - 100%)。未发现有临床发现的LR能强烈预测良好的神经功能结局。
简单的体格检查操作可强烈预测心脏骤停昏迷幸存者的死亡或不良结局。最有用的体征出现在心脏骤停后24小时,不应仅通过临床检查进行早期预后判断。这些数据提供的是预后信息,而非治疗建议,治疗建议必须根据个体情况并综合许多其他变量来制定。