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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: Crit Care Med. 2014 Jun;42(6):1518–1523. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000216

Table 4.

Associations of hypotension during first six hours post-cardiac arrest with outcomes. Hypotension defined as a minimum systolic blood pressure < 5th percentile; percentiles derived from normative age and sex data.

No hypotension Hypotension Unadjusted Fully Adjusted* Parsimonious**
N (%) N (%) OR (95% CI); P OR (95% CI); P OR (95% CI); P
In-hospital mortality 70/169 (41) 114/214 (53) 1.61 (1.07, 2.43); 0.022 1.71 (1.02, 2.89); 0.042 1.71 (1.07, 2.76); 0.026
Unfavorable outcome 82/160 (51) 128/207 (62) 1.54 (1.02, 2.34); 0.043 1.83 (1.06, 3.19); 0.032 1.78 (1.08, 2.95); 0.024

OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval

*

Adjusted for age (cubic splines), pre-existing conditions (lung or airway; hematologic, oncologic, or immune compromised; genetic metabolic; neurologic), total number of vasopressors before arrest, night or weekend arrest, arrest location, first documented rhythm, and total doses of epinephrine at arrest; 26 patients removed due to missing data

**

Adjusted for arrest location, pre-existing conditions (hematologic, oncologic, or immune compromised; genetic metabolic), and total doses of epinephrine at arrest; 24 patients removed due to missing data