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Critical care clinics · Jan 2009
Historical ArticleCardiopulmonary resuscitation: from the beginning to the present day.
- Giuseppe Ristagno, Wanchun Tang, and Max Harry Weil.
- Weil Institute of Critical Care Medicine, 35100 Bob Hope Drive, Rancho Mirage, CA 92270, USA.
- Crit Care Clin. 2009 Jan 1;25(1):133-51, ix.
AbstractCardiac arrest represents a dramatic event that can occur suddenly and often without premonitory signs, characterized by sudden loss of consciousness and breathing after cardiac output ceases and both coronary and cerebral blood flows stop. Restarting of the blood flow by cardiopulmonary resuscitation potentially re-establishes some cardiac output and organ blood flows. This article summarizes the major events that encompass the history of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, beginning with ancient history and evolving into the current American Heart Association's commitment to save hearts.
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