Episode 220: Post-ROSC Care

Episode 220: Post-ROSC Care

Author: Core EM March 3, 2026 Duration: 0:00

We explore how to refine and optimize care in the vital minutes following ROSC.

Hosts:
Jonathan Elmer, MD, MS
Brian Gilberti, MD

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Show Notes

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I. Phase 1: Stabilization (Minutes 0–10)

The “Rearrest” Window & Pathophysiology

  • High-Risk Period: Rearrest rates reach 30% within the first minutes post-ROSC.
  • Shock Incidence: Two-thirds of patients develop profound hypotension/shock as initial resuscitative efforts subside.
  • Catecholamine Washout: Super-physiologic “code-dose” epinephrine (1mg IV) typically wears off within ~3 minutes post-ROSC, leading to predictable hemodynamic collapse.
  • Secondary Injuries: Evaluate for “CPR-induced trauma” (blunt thoracic trauma, rib fractures, pneumothorax, liver/splenic lacerations).

Immediate Resuscitative Actions

  • Vascular Access:
    • Transition rapidly from IO to reliable IV access within 1–2 minutes.
    • Prioritize Intraosseous (IO) placement within 5 minutes if IV attempts fail; intra-arrest data suggests no significant difference in early outcomes.
  • Vasoactive “Bridge”:
    • Maintain a “bolus-dose” pressor at the bedside for immediate push-dose titration.
    • Options: Phenylephrine, dilute Epinephrine, or dilute Norepinephrine (titrated to effect rather than rigid dosing).
  • Physician-Specific Task: Arterial Line:
    • Goal: Placement within 5 minutes of ROSC.
    • Preferred Site: Femoral (by landmarks/blind if necessary) for speed; should be a <2-minute procedure.
    • Utility: Immediate detection of rearrest and beat-to-beat titration of vasopressors.

II. Phase 2: Diagnostic Workup (Minutes 10–40)

Etiology Epidemiology

  • ACS Shift: Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) is the cause in only 6–10% of resuscitated survivors (lower than historical estimates).
  • Common Etiologies:
  • Respiratory: COPD, pneumonia, mucus plugging.

    • Cardiac: Arrhythmia (cardiomyopathy/scar), RV failure (PE), or LV failure.
    • Neurological: Intracranial hemorrhage (SAH/ICH), status epilepticus (4–5%).
    • Metabolic: Dialysis-related disarray/hyperkalemia.
    • Toxicology: Overdose accounts for ~10% of cases in urban centers.

The “Broad Net” Strategy

  • “Rainbow Labs”: Comprehensive panel including toxicology and serial biomarkers.
  • Pan-Scan Protocol:
    • Components: CT/CTA Head/Neck, Contrast CT Chest/Abdomen/Pelvis.
    • Diagnostic Yield: 50% for clinically significant findings (causes or consequences of arrest).
    • Contrast Risk: Negligible (1–2% increase in AKI risk) compared to the high diagnostic utility.
  • Avoid Anchoring: Do not assume ischemic EKG changes are the cause; they are frequently a consequence of the global arrest-induced ischemia.

III. Hemodynamic & Respiratory Targets

Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP)

  • Autoregulation Shift: In acute brain injury/post-arrest, the lower limit of cerebral autoregulation shifts right, often requiring MAPs of 110–120 mmHg for adequate perfusion.
  • Clinical Target: Aim for MAP >80 mmHg.
  • The BOX Trial Nuance: While the BOX trial showed no difference between MAP 63 vs. 77, its cohort (Denmark) had exceptionally high survival rates (70% back to work) and short response times, which may not generalize to North American populations with lower shockable rhythm incidence.
  • Permissive Hypertension: If the patient is “self-driving” to higher pressures, do not aggressively lower them, as this may be a physiologic demand for cerebral blood flow.

Ventilation and Oxygenation

  • PaCO2 Management:
    • Target: High-normal to slightly hypercarbic (45–55 mmHg).
    • Rationale: Avoid accidental hyperventilation (PaCO2 <30), which can cut cerebral blood flow by 50%.
  • PaO2 Management: Maintain normoxia; avoid extreme hyperoxia, though trial data (BOX trial) suggests small variances (70 vs 90 mmHg) are likely neutral.

IV. Neurological Prognostication & Communication

The “Stunned” Brain

  • Anoxic Depolarization: Occurs within ~2 minutes of pulselessness as ATP-dependent ion pumps fail.
  • Clinical Pitfall: Early neurological exams (absent pupils, no motor response) are unreliable in the first hours as they reflect global neuronal “stunning” rather than definitive permanent injury.
  • Time Horizon: Meaningful recovery is measured in days/weeks, not minutes/hours.

Family Engagement

  • Presence: Bring family to the bedside immediately, including during procedures or continued resuscitation.
  • Psychological Impact: Significantly reduces PTSD, anxiety, and depression in survivors’ families.
  • Prognostic Honesty: Explicitly state “I don’t know” regarding etiology and outcome.
  • Framing: Define “No News” as the best possible early outcome (preventing rearrest and stabilization).

Read More

There’s a particular kind of pressure that comes with working in an emergency department, where decisions need to be both swift and sound. Core EM-Emergency Medicine Podcast exists in that space, offering a direct line to the essential knowledge and clinical reasoning that emergency medicine demands. Created by the team at Core EM, each episode feels less like a formal lecture and more like a focused conversation with a trusted colleague. You’ll hear discussions that break down critical topics, from managing common presentations to unraveling complex, high-acuity cases, all grounded in current evidence and practical reality. This podcast serves as a reliable resource for physicians, residents, and advanced practice providers looking to solidify their foundation or stay sharp on the latest evidence. It’s about cutting through the noise to deliver core content that’s immediately applicable at the bedside. Tune in for a clear, concise, and always relevant dive into the principles that define emergency care, designed to fit into a busy clinician’s life between shifts or during a commute.
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Core EM - Emergency Medicine Podcast
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