Annals of emergency medicine
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Comparative Study
Cardiopulmonary bypass vs CPR as treatment for prolonged canine cardiopulmonary arrest.
Although in vitro studies have demonstrated functional recovery of neurons after prolonged ischemia, in vivo experience with patients resuscitated from cardiopulmonary arrest demonstrates much less cerebral resistance to global ischemia. The purpose of our investigation was to compare the effectiveness of femoro-femoral veno-arterial cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) to standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the treatment of prolonged cardiopulmonary arrest. Ten mongrel dogs were electrically fibrillated and left in cardiopulmonary arrest without any therapy for 12 minutes. ⋯ The other two CPB animals had persistent severe neurologic impairment and a mean NDS score of 51%. Thus CPB is more effective than CPR in the treatment of prolonged cardiopulmonary arrest. The improved outcome probably results primarily from improvement in blood flow with CPB.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A comparison of blind nasotracheal and succinylcholine-assisted intubation in the poisoned patient.
In the patient obtunded by drug intoxication, the optimal method of airway protection prior to gastric emptying is not clear. We report a prospective randomized trial of two methods of intubation in this patient population. Fifty-two overdose patients with Glascow Coma Scale scores of 12 or less were intubated either orotracheally after succinylcholine administration or nasotracheally. ⋯ Sixty-nine percent of the BNI group experienced epistaxis, 17% had vomiting, and 10% aspirated. We conclude that SAI is a safe and effective method of airway protection in the obtunded poisoned patient. Complications and difficulty in intubation were significantly less with SAI than with blind nasotracheal intubation.
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Comparative Study
Cardiopulmonary bypass after prolonged cardiac arrest in dogs.
Ventricular fibrillation (VF) cardiac arrest of more than ten minutes can be survived by cerebral neurons, but restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) by external CPR is unreliable. Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) permits control of pressure, flow, oxygenation, temperature, and composition of blood. After 12 1/2 minutes of normothermic VF cardiac arrest, CPB was used as a research tool for reperfusion and assisted circulation for two hours in ten dogs without thoracotomy, with plasma substitute priming, and without preceding CPR (a deliberately nonclinical scenario). ⋯ CPB was followed by fewer arrhythmias. CPB increased recovery of consciousness (five of ten CPB vs zero of six controls with ROSC) (P = .037), but achieved neurologic normality in only one of ten. Cardiac arrest and CPB (without CPR) resulted in less myocardial morphologic damage than did standard CPR (P less than .025).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Ocean water and tissue samples were obtained from a variety of sources with phylogenetic and geographic diversity. Purified bacterial colonies were isolated and identification procedures were performed. A total of 67 isolates were recovered. ⋯ Further recommendations for treatment are based on sensitivity in culture. Some isolates failed to grow in the medium used for susceptibility testing. Because commercial test kits may not yield accurate identifications of bacteria, the acquisition of antimicrobial susceptibility data gains added importance.