R. Van Hoeyweghen
University of Antwerp
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Featured researches published by R. Van Hoeyweghen.
Resuscitation | 1989
Leo Bossaert; R. Van Hoeyweghen
Prevalence of bystander CPR and effect on outcome has been evaluated on 3053 out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (CA) events. Bystander CPR was performed in 33% of recorded cases (n = 998) by lay people in 406 cases (family members 178, other lay people 228) and by bystanding health care workers in 592 cases (nurses 86, doctors 506). Family members and lay people mainly applied CPR in younger CA victims at public places, roadside or at the working place. Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and drowning are highly represented. Health care workers performed CPR mainly in older patients, at public places or at the roadside and especially in case of cardiac or respiratory origin. CA caused by trauma/exsanguination and intoxication/metabolic origin received less bystander CPR (23% resp. 22%). Cardiac arrests receiving bystander CPR are more frequently witnessed and have a shorter access time to the emergency medical service (EMS) system and shorter response time of basic life support (BLS). Advanced life support (ALS) response time is significantly longer. In witnessed arrests of cardiac origin receiving bystander CPR a significantly better late survival was observed. In non-witnessed arrests of cardiac origin early and late survival are significantly higher in patients receiving bystander CPR. In CA events where response time of ALS exceeds 8 min, the beneficial effect of bystander CPR is most significant. Furthermore no deleterious effect of bad technique or inefficient bystander CPR can be demonstrated.
Intensive Care Medicine | 1992
Patrick Martens; Arsene Mullie; Paul Calle; R. Van Hoeyweghen
A total of 6178 persons with out-of-hospital (70%) and inhospital (30%) cardiac arrests from the first of January 1982 until the end of 1989 were reviewed retrospectively with respect to 4 variables, contributing to a score for specific prediction of poor prognosis (cut-off point: >3 points) [11]. These included age, initial ECG, type of respiratory arrest and bystander resuscitation. Presence of ventricular fibrillation, gasping and bystander resuscitation contributes nothing to the score, while presence of asystole or EMD (electromechanical dissociation), apnoea and absence of bystander resuscitation adds one point to it. Of patients scoring 4 or 5 points 44 were awake 14 days post CPR (Class 3). The positive predictive value of the score was 97% (95% CI96–98%) for the out-of-hospital group and 92.2% (95% CI 88–95%) for the in-hospital group. The specificity was respectively 92.3% (95% CI 89–95%) and 94.2% (95% CI 91–96%). Although the score can weigh the likelihood of no success against that of success, we cannot recommend it for decision making as far as abandoning or continuing cardiopulmonary resuscitation efforts.
Resuscitation | 1989
Arsene Mullie; Paul J. Lewi; R. Van Hoeyweghen
Outcome of cardiac arrest (CA) is very much influenced by pre-CPR conditions. To assess the importance of these pre-CPR factors, an analysis of the Belgian CPCR registry was made according to some pre-CPR conditions. In this registry, several variables related to pre-arrest, arrest, CPR and post CPR period have been recorded in 4548 patients. The pre-CPR conditions studied were: age, witnessed event or not, pre-arrest health state, underlying disease, site of cardiac arrest, type of respiratory arrest and type of cardiac arrest. Age did not influence outcome significantly. The importance of witnessing is very significant. Severe pre-arrest disability reduces chances on long-term survival (LTS) to half and overall health status longterm survivors is clearly less. Intoxication and metabolic origin of CA have good prognosis (LTS, 21%). Trauma/exsanguination, drowning, SIDS and sepsis have bad prognosis (LTS, 1-3%). Cardiac (LTS, 12%) and respiratory (LTS, 14%) origin have similar outcome, although significant difference exists in occurrence of cerebral failure, suggesting that post-ischemic encephalopathy is more severe in respiratory than in cardiac origin. The most frequent site of CA, the home of the patient, has poor outcome results (LTS, 5%). Gasping is significantly related to successful outcome. In the out-of-hospital setting the type of CA was 25% VF (LTS, 77%), 65% asystole (LTS, 4%) and 10% EMD (LTS, 3%). Outcome of the subgroup out-of-hospital, witnessed, VF is comparable to other reports. This sub-group seems to us the most appropriate for clinical trials.
Clinical Rheumatology | 1993
R. Van Hoeyweghen; L. S. De Clerck; J. F. Van Offel; W. J. Stevens
SummaryAdult-onset Stills disease is an uncommon rheumatological syndrome with a diversity of signs and symptoms. Pulmonary manifestations described are pleuritis and usually transient radiologic infiltrations. The patient presented in this case report had biopsy-proven lung fibrosis when adult-onset Stills disease was diagnosed. Three years after diagnosis, the patient developed clinical signs of the interstitial lung disorder. Radiological and histological progression was observed. Other causes of interstitial lung disorders were excluded. Clinicians should be aware that interstitial lung disease can be a complication of adult-onset Stills disease and can compromise the clinical status of the patient.
Resuscitation | 1989
Arsene Mullie; R. Van Hoeyweghen; A. Quets
Several time intervals, with important influence on the outcome of CA and CPR, are determined by the local EMS-MICU characteristics: time to introduction in the EMS, response time of BLS, duration of BLS before ALS. These time factors have been studied in 2779 out-of-hospital CA cases, treated by the MICU in teams of 7 major Belgian hospitals. The analysis compares the time intervals in the following pre-CPR conditions: the age of the patient; the previous health status of the patient; the disease underlying the CA; the site where CA occurs; the witnessing of the CA; the type of CA; the MICU center, responding to the CA. The mean introduction time is 4.6 min, the mean response time of BLS is 5.1 min, the mean duration of BLS before ALS is 11 min. Introduction in EMS should be improved in CA due to intoxication, drowning, SIDS and respiratory disease, and overall when CA occurs at home.
Resuscitation | 1989
R. Van Hoeyweghen; E. Vercammen; Leo Bossaert
Neuronal calcium overloading after complete ischemia-anoxia of the brain might be the primary process initiating chemical cascades which lead to cell death. According to this hypothesis calcium-entry blocking agents act on the final common pathway of brain damage. Flunarizine, a selective calcium-entry blocker (without influence on heart rate and on cardiac contractile force), was administered to 12 unconscious patients, recovering from cardiac arrest (CA) of cardiac origin, according to a strict dose-range infusion protocol. Blood-pressure and heart rate (HR) were recorded before, during (t = 10 min, 20 min) and after (t = 30 min, 2 h, 4 h, 6 h, 8 h) each flunarizine infusion (maximum 4 infusions). A significant, although not clinically relevant, decrease in heart rate was noted during the first infusion. Systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) also decreased during the infusion without reaching statistical significance. Plasma levels of flunarizine were determined before and after each infusion (t = 15 min, 30 min, 1 h, 2 h, 4 h, 6 h, 8 h, 12 h). Flunarizine plasma concentrations declined very rapidly after cessation of each infusion. Sequential half-lives were in the order of 11-19 min and 5-7 h, and primarily reflect rates of distribution between the systemic circulation and the rapidly equilibrating tissues such as the brain. No substantial accumulation of flunarizine was described and plasma levels were proportional to the give dose. Therefore, flunarizine pharmacokinetics can be considered as linear for doses up to 50 mg.
Resuscitation | 1989
Arsene Mullie; R. Van Hoeyweghen; A. Quets
Resuscitation | 1993
Patrick Martens; Arsene Mullie; Paul Calle; R. Van Hoeyweghen
Resuscitation | 1989
R. Van Hoeyweghen; Arsene Mullie; Leo Bossaert
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 1992
R. Van Hoeyweghen; I. De Leeuw; M. Vandewoude