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The goal of this observational study is to establish the protocol of systemic analysis of the causes of non-traumatic cardiac arrest in young patients. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Participants will be asked to received serial examinations including genetic analysis to explore the cause of cardiac arrest.
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Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is an important emergency medical issue. Although the refinement of resuscitation and post-arrest care improved the survival rate of cardiac arrest patients, the rate of survival-to-discharge is still less than 20%. The Utstein templates for cardiac arrest classified the pathogenesis of cardiac arrest into medical (presumed cardiac or unknown, other medical causes); traumatic cause; drug overdose; drowning; electrocution; or asphyxial (external). Presumed cardiac caused arrest in pre-hospital setting might turned out to be other cause after series of workup. In recent observational studies, cardiac origin arrests accounted for about 50% of OHCA. These patients had better prognosis than patients with non-cardiac causes. Identifying and correcting the persistent precipitating pathology is also a crucial element in managing post cardiac arrest syndrome.
Systemic analysis protocol, including history, electrocardiogram, laboratory exam, imaging studies, cardiac catheterization, toxicology screening, could facilitate the identification of the causes of cardiac arrest and minimize the proportion of unknown causes. In young patients, structural heart diseases and arrhythmias were also the important causes of cardiac origin arrest. Genetic tests might aid the recognition of sudden arrhythmic death syndrome in this group. This study aims to establish the protocol of systemic analysis of the causes of non-traumatic cardiac arrest in young patients, and minimized the proportion of unknown causes and mis-classification.
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Dean-An Ling, MD; Min-Shan Tsai, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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