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RHAPSody: Diagnostic Utility of RUSH Following ROSC

University of Florida logo

University of Florida

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Cardiac Arrest

Treatments

Device: RUSH Exam

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03409289
OCR18537 (Other Identifier)
IRB201702314

Details and patient eligibility

About

This will be a prospective observational study of adult primary cardiac arrest patients presenting to Shands Emergency Department following ROSC or actively in cardiac arrest with subsequent ROSC after treatment in the emergency department.

Full description

This will be a prospective observational study of adult primary cardiac arrest patients presenting to Shands Emergency Department following ROSC or actively in cardiac arrest with subsequent ROSC after treatment in the emergency department. The study will be a single center pilot study to evaluate the role of the extended RUSH exam in patients following cardiac arrest in order to potentially diagnose the cause of their arrest. No control group will be included in this study due to ethical concerns of withholding a potentially life-saving diagnostic test. Patients will be treated with ACLS per standard of care and resuscitation measures given. Within two hours of return of spontaneous circulation, the RUSH exam will be performed by ultrasound-trained emergency department physicians with images saved into the Qpath system, our already existing database where all emergency ultrasound exams - education and diagnostic - are stored currently. The physician who performed the exam will fill out a checklist with their interpretation and findings based on the elements included in the exam. The data collected will be stored in a RedCap database. Identifying data will be removed from the images and reviewed by two experienced ultrasonographers who will give separate interpretations, and inter-observer reliability will be examined. We will then correlate the interpretation with that of the physicians performing the exam. The elements of the RUSH exam that will be performed include focused evaluation of the heart, inferior vena cava, abdomen and aorta with the addition of evaluation for DVT and ocular ultrasound. The evaluation for DVT will be an abbreviated exam with one view of each of the bilateral femoral veins and popliteal veins. Techniques for performing the exam are based on the 2012 RUSH guidelines [2]. The data will undergo statistical analysis to determine if the data supported the initial hypotheses. Subjects will be contacted 30 days following the initial study for telephone follow-up and a CPC assessment for neurologic recovery will also be performed at that time.

Enrollment

5 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Incoming ER patients with return of spontaneous circulation after cardiac arrest

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients who do not achieve return of spontaneous circulation long enough for the exam to be performed
  • Patients who have initial cardiac arrest while on an inpatient unit of the hospital

Trial design

5 participants in 1 patient group

ROSC RUSH Exam
Description:
The study population will include out of hospital cardiac arrest (both traumatic and non-traumatic causes) with return of spontaneous circulation after the cardiac arrest while in the emergency department .
Treatment:
Device: RUSH Exam

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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