Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, Shock: Injury, Inflammation and Sepsis, 2(32), p. 210-216, 2009
DOI: 10.1097/shk.0b013e318196ee99
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Mild-to-moderate therapeutic hypothermia after resuscitation from cardiac arrest is neuroprotective, but its effect on postresuscitation myocardial dysfunction is not clear. We hypothesized that therapeutic hypothermia is cardioprotective in postresuscitation. Male adult Wistar rats underwent asphyxia-induced cardiac arrest and manual resuscitation with epinephrine. Therapeutic hypothermia is induced immediately after successful resuscitation and the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). One hour after ROSC, the rats achieved a target temperature of 30 degrees C to 31 degrees C, which was maintained for 1.5 h and then transitioned to the passive rewarming process in the hypothermia group. A temperature between 36.5 degrees C and 37.5 degrees C was maintained in the normothermia group . Echocardiography revealed that hypothermia resulted in significantly better systolic function of fractional shortening in 60 and 120 min after ROSC (both P