• Anesthesia and analgesia · Dec 2004

    Ventricular fibrillation median frequency may not be useful for monitoring during cardiac arrest treated with endothelin-1 or epinephrine.

    • Michael Holzer, Wilhelm Behringer, Fritz Sterz, Julia Kofler, Elisabeth Oschatz, Ernst Schuster, and Anton N Laggner.
    • Universitätsklinik für Notfallmedizin, Allgemeines Krankenhaus der Stadt Wien, 1090 Wien, Währinger Gürtel 18-20 (6/D), Austria.
    • Anesth. Analg. 2004 Dec 1; 99 (6): 1787-93, table of contents.

    AbstractIn this study, we evaluated whether median fibrillation frequency (MF) and mean fibrillation amplitude (AMP) reflect coronary perfusion pressure (CoPP) and predict successful defibrillation. MF, AMP, and CoPP were measured during prolonged ventricular fibrillation (VF) cardiac arrest and resuscitation in pigs. After 5 min of VF, cardiopulmonary resuscitation was started. At 10 min, the pigs received randomly a single dose of endothelin-1 50 mug (n = 7), 100 mug (n = 7), or 200 mug (n = 5), or repeated doses of epinephrine 0.04 mg/kg (n = 6), or saline (n = 6) every 3 min. At 25 min, the pigs were defibrillated to achieve restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). In a nonparametric spectral analysis of the individual MF versus CoPP and AMP versus CoPP curves, we found no link between the different curves in different animals or therapies. No difference was found in MF in pigs with ROSC (n = 8) compared with animals not achieving ROSC (n = 23) immediately before defibrillation (P = 0.85). Our data suggest that, in prolonged VF cardiac arrest, MF and AMP might not be useful tools to reflect myocardial perfusion.

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