But the patients in Dr. Pepe’s study who received neuroprotective CPR had a 10 percent chance of leaving the hospital neurologically intact.
Patients who received neuroprotective CPR within 11 minutes of a 911 call were about three times as likely to survive with good brain function as those who received conventional CPR.
“We’re limited to the available data,” she said, adding that the committee would like to see a clinical trial in which people undergoing cardiac arrests are randomly assigned to conventional CPR or neuroprotective CPR.
Two of his teams, he said, were getting neurologically intact survival rates of about 7 percent with conventional CPR.
With neuroprotective CPR, the rates rose to around 23 percent.
Persons:
Pepe’s, Dr, Pepe, Jason Benjamin, Benjamin, Lurie, Mr, Karen Hirsch, Joe Holley
Organizations:
Stanford University, American Heart Association
Locations:
St, Augustine, Fla, United States, Memphis