PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Cognitive problems are common after cardiac arrest

2015-04-17
(Press-News.org) Half of all patients who survive a cardiac arrest experience problems with cognitive functions such as memory and attention. This has been shown by a major international study led from Lund University. Surprisingly, however, a control group comprising heart attack patients had largely the same level of problems. This suggests that it is not only the cardiac arrest and the consequent lack of oxygen to the brain that is the cause of the patients' difficulties.

The study led by Lund University involved 950 cardiac arrest patients in Europe and Australia. Six months after the cardiac arrest, half of the patients had died, and the survivors were followed up with cognitive screening tests. Both the patients and their relatives were also asked to report changes that had taken place following the cardiac arrest.

Almost 300 cardiac arrest survivors also underwent more detailed tests. Their results were compared with a control group made up of heart attack patients.

"We thought there would be a clear difference between the groups, because the heart attack patients had not been exposed to any oxygen deficiency in the brain. However, they had signs of mild brain damage to almost the same extent as the cardiac arrest patients", says Dr Tobias Cronberg, Associate Professor at Lund University and consultant neurologist at Skåne University Hospital in Lund.

The researchers therefore believe that the cognitive problems can be explained to a high degree by the risk factors that are common to patients with different types of heart complaint, for example diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. Other studies have already shown that these factors increase the risk of dementia.

"Our conclusion is that if we are to provide good treatment to cardiac arrest patients, we don't just need to save their lives; we also need to ensure that they tackle these risk factors, for example through improved diet and more exercise. Otherwise they are at risk of developing dementia", says Tobias Cronberg.

Dr Cronberg believes it would be good if all cardiac arrest patients received follow-up not just with regard to physical health, but also with regard to memory and attention. Both patients and their relatives have appreciated the opportunity to discuss any deterioration, its causes and how it can be addressed.

However, the international study showed that the quality of life of most cardiac arrest survivors was generally in line with that of the rest of the population. According to Tobias Cronberg, survival in itself probably plays an important part in this: the patients know that they have come close to dying and are grateful to still be alive.

The main aim of the study was to compare the effect of a body temperature of 33°C and 36°C following cardiac arrest. The researchers have previously shown that maintaining a temperature of 36°C produced the same survival rate as cooling to 33°C.

"We have now also demonstrated that not only survival but also cognitive ability is the same in patients who have been kept at 33°C or 36°C. This is very important for the reliability of the results we have previously presented", said Tobias Cronberg.

The research group's results have been published in two distinguished journals, Circulation and JAMA Neurology.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Evolution puts checks on virgin births

Evolution puts checks on virgin births
2015-04-17
This news release is available in Japanese. It seems unnatural that a species could survive without having sex. Yet over the ages, evolution has endowed females of certain species of amphibians, reptiles and fish with the ability to clone themselves, and perpetuate offspring without males. Researchers at the at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST) found that in species where females have evolved the ability to reproduce without males relatively recently, fertilization is still ensuring the survival of the maximum number of healthy ...

Stomach ulcers in cattle

Stomach ulcers in cattle
2015-04-17
Scientists at the Vetmeduni Vienna investigated whether stomach ulcers in cattle are related to the presence of certain bacteria. For their study, they analyzed bacteria present in healthy and ulcerated cattle stomachs and found very few differences in microbial diversity. Bacteria therefore appear to play a minor role in the development of ulcers. The microbial diversity present in the stomachs of cattle has now for the first time been published in the journal Veterinary Microbiology. Gastritis and stomach ulcers in humans are often caused by the bacterium Helicobacter ...

Cancer and chemobrain: Cancer diagnosis affects cognitive function

2015-04-17
Breast cancer patients often display mild cognitive defects even before the initiation of chemotherapy. A new study by Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich researchers now attributes the syndrome to post-traumatic stress induced by diagnosis of the disease. A large number of studies have shown that cancer patients very often exhibit mild deficits of attention, memory and other basic cognitive functions. The phenomenon has generally been attributed to putative side-effects of chemotherapeutic drugs on the brain, and the condition is therefore popularly referred ...

Droperidol is safe for agitated ER patients, despite black box warning

2015-04-17
WASHINGTON --Droperidol is safe and effective for calming violent and aggressive emergency patients, and the negative effects that garnered a black box warning from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are actually quite rare. A new study of the once ubiquitous, now scarce, sedating agent was published online Wednesday in Annals of Emergency Medicine ("The Safety and Effectiveness of Droperidol for Sedation of Acute Behavioral Disturbance in the Emergency Department"). "In our study, the two side effects that led to the black box warning - QT prolongation and torsades ...

NEJM editorial: New studies about endovascular therapy for stroke represent paradigm shift

2015-04-17
CLEVELAND -- Anthony J. Furlan, MD, Chairman of Neurology and Co-Director of the Neurological Institute at University Hospitals (UH) Case Medical Center and Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, who writes an accompanying editorial for five studies about endovascular stroke therapy published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM.org April 17), says these randomized clinical trials represent a breakthrough in showing the benefits of endovascular therapy for acute ischemic strokes. "Now even endovascular skeptics will be convinced," Dr. ...

Engineer improves rechargeable batteries with MoS2 nano 'sandwich'

Engineer improves rechargeable batteries with MoS2 nano sandwich
2015-04-17
MANHATTAN, KANSAS -- The key to better cellphones and other rechargeable electronics may be in tiny "sandwiches" made of nanosheets, according to mechanical engineering research from Kansas State University. Gurpreet Singh, assistant professor of mechanical and nuclear engineering, and his research team are improving rechargeable lithium-ion batteries. The team has focused on the lithium cycling of molybdenum disulfide, or MoS2, sheets, which Singh describes as a "sandwich" of one molybdenum atom between two sulfur atoms. In the latest research, the team has found ...

UCLA demographer produces best estimate yet of Cambodia's death toll under Pol Pot

2015-04-17
The death toll in Cambodia under Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot was most likely between 1.2 million and 2.8 million -- or between 13 percent and 30 percent of the country's population at the time -- according to a forthcoming article by a UCLA demographer. April 17 is the 40th anniversary of the Khmer Rouge's capture of the capital of Cambodia -- beginning a four-year period that many consider to be a genocide. For decades, researchers have sought to pinpoint the death toll from political executions, disease, starvation and forced labor inflicted under the Khmer Rouge. Conventional ...

Self-affirmations may calm jitters and boost performance, research finds

2015-04-17
When the stakes are high, people in positions of low power may perform better by using self-affirmations to boost their confidence, according to new research published by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. "Most people have experienced a time in their lives when they aren't performing up to their potential. They take a test or have a performance review at work, but something holds them back," says lead researcher Sonia Kang, Ph.D. "Performance in these situations is closely related to how we are expected to behave." The researchers conducted three experiments ...

Smokers underestimate risks of a few cigarettes

2015-04-17
Geneva, Switzerland, 17 April 2015 -- Many people still dangerously underestimate the health risks associated with smoking even a few cigarettes a day, despite decades of public health campaigning, French researchers have reported at the European Lung Cancer Conference (ELCC) in Geneva, Switzerland. The results demonstrate powerfully that the war against smoking is far from over, says oncologist Dr Laurent Greillier from Hopital Nord in Marseille, France, who presented the results at the conference. Greillier and colleagues analysed data from a representative survey ...

Should they stay or go? Study finds no harm when hospitals allow familes to observe CPR

2015-04-17
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- When a hospital patient's heart stops, the drama starts, as doctors and nurses work furiously at resuscitation. And at many hospitals, that's the cue for someone to pull a curtain and hurry the patient's loved ones out of the room. But some hospitals allow those family members to stay, and watch the cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and other attempts to save the patient's life that the medical team makes. Now, a study has shown for the first time on a national scale that patients do just as well after a cardiac arrest at those hospitals, compared ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Autonomous AI agents developed to detect early signs of cognitive decline

Study finds ocean impacts nearly double economic cost of climate change

Increased deciduous tree dominance reduces wildfire carbon losses in boreal forests

Researchers discover how a respiratory bacterium obtains essential lipids from the human body and targets fat-rich tissues

Locust swarms destroy crops. Scientists found a way to stop that

More resources and collaboration needed to support prevention and treatment of obesity

Two types of underconfidence linked to anxiety and gender

​​​​​​​Insects are victims too: Global study shows impacts of invasive alien species on populations

Pioneering natural, degradable polymer capsules

Forestry is becoming digital and automated

Maternity baby deaths much higher in northern England than in the South

Mosquitoes’ thirst for human blood has increased as biodiversity loss worsens

The stop-smoking medication varenicline may also work for cannabis use disorder

Potential new treatment for sepsis

Study reveals how many hours of video games per week might be too many

Electrospinning for mimicking bioelectric microenvironment in tissue regeneration

Home fingertip oxygen monitors less accurate for people with darker skin tones

Six weeks in a cast no less effective than surgery for unstable ankle fractures

Precautionary approach to alcohol-free and low alcohol drinks needed to protect public health, say experts

Gas-atomized Ca–Mg alloy powders produce hydrogen simply by adding water — high-efficiency hydrogen generation at room temperature

British redcoat’s lost memoir reveals harsh realities of life as a disabled veteran

World-leading rare earth magnet recycling facility launches in UK

Corday Selden selected for the Oceanography Society Early Career Award

MIT chemists determine the structure of the fuzzy coat that surrounds Tau proteins

Same moves, different terrain: How bacteria navigate complex environments without changing their playbook

Severe weather is deadly for vulnerable older adults long after the storm ends, study finds

Expert panel highlights opportunities for improving cancer studies

Hearing aid prescriptions not associated with changes in memory and thinking

Seth Zippel selected for The Oceanography Society Early Career Award

Jeremy Horowitz selected for The Oceanography Society Early Career Award

[Press-News.org] Cognitive problems are common after cardiac arrest