• Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jul 2009

    Practice Guideline

    Guideline for resuscitation in cardiac arrest after cardiac surgery.

    • Joel Dunning, Alessandro Fabbri, Philippe H Kolh, Adrian Levine, Ulf Lockowandt, Jonathan Mackay, Alain J Pavie, Tim Strang, Michael I M Versteegh, Samer A M Nashef, and EACTS Clinical Guidelines Committee.
    • Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough, UK.
    • Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2009 Jul 1;36(1):3-28.

    AbstractThe Clinical Guidelines Committee of the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery provides this professional view on resuscitation in cardiac arrest after cardiac surgery. This document was created using a multimodal methodology for evidence generation including the extrapolation of existing guidelines from the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation where possible, our own structured literature reviews on issues particular to cardiac surgery, an international survey on resuscitation hosted by CTSNet and manikin simulations of potential protocols. This protocol differs from existing generic guidelines in a number of areas, the most import of which are the following: successful treatment of cardiac arrest after cardiac surgery is a multi-practitioner activity with six key roles that should be allocated and rehearsed on a regular basis; in ventricular fibrillation, three sequential attempts at defibrillation (where immediately available) should precede external cardiac massage; in asystole or extreme bradycardia, pacing (where immediately available) should precede external cardiac massage; where the above measures fail, and in pulseless electrical activity, early resternotomy is advocated; adrenaline should not be routinely given; protocols for excluding reversible airway and breathing complications and for safe emergency resternotomy are given. This guideline is subject to continuous informal review, and when new evidence becomes available.

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