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. 2017 Sep 29;4:156. doi: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00156

Table 1.

Experimental studies on coagulofibrinolytic changes associated with cardiac arrest and “no-reflow phenomenon.”

Authors Intervention Method Effect
Ames et al. (8) Heparin Cerebral ischemia in rabbits Extended period of permissible ischemia and long-term survival
Kowada et al. (82)
Fischer et al. (83) Hemodilution with saline Cerebral ischemia in rabbits Improvement of cerebral circulatory impairment
Safar et al. (84) Combination of hypertensive perfusion, heparin, and dextran Cardiac arrest in dogs Improvement of neurological deficit score and normalization of the electroencephalogram
Lin et al. (85) Combination of dextran and streptokinase Cardiac arrest in dogs Improvement of impaired cerebral blood flow and normalization of the electroencephalogram
Fischer et al. (88) Heparin and recombinant tissue plasminogen activator Cardiac arrest in cats Improvement of microcirculatory reperfusion
Teschendorf et al. (109) Recombinant human activated protein C Cardiac arrest in rats No deference of neurological deficit score. Failure to limit the inflammatory response to ischemic injury
Teschendorf et al. (110) Recombinant human activated protein C Cardiac arrest in rats No significant effect on wall shear rate and plasma extravasation
Johansson et al. (111) Antithrombin Cardiac arrest in piglets Failure to increase cerebral circulation or reduce reperfusion injury
Yin et al. (114) Shen-Fu injection (ginsenoside and acotinine) Cardiac arrest in pigs Inhibition of coagulation–fibrinolysis disorders after cardiac arrest