The American journal of emergency medicine
-
Multicenter Study
High sensitivity troponin - Six hours is the magic number.
High sensitivity troponin assays have become widespread for emergency department evaluation of acute chest pain. We assessed if a high sensitivity troponin under the 99th percentile upper reference limit drawn at 6 h or greater from symptom onset could safely rule out acute coronary syndrome in patients who did not meet the rapid rule-out strategy. ⋯ This study assessed patients with chest pain with high sensitivity troponin values between 3 ng/L and the 99th percentile upper reference limit after 6 h of chest pain and found that they have a low rate of clinically relevant adverse cardiac events and NSTEMI.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
Comparison of two infant cardiopulmonary resuscitation techniques explained by phone in a non-health professionals' population: Two-thumbs encircling hand technique vs. two-fingers technique, a randomised crossover study in a simulation environment.
Paediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is the reason for an emergency call in approximately 8/100,000 person-years. Improvement of OHCA resuscitation needs a quality chain of survival and a rapid start of resuscitation. The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy of two resuscitation techniques provided on a mannequin, the two-fingers technique (TFT) and the two-thumbs encircling hand technique (TTHT), explained by a trained emergency call responder on the phone in a population of non-health professionals. ⋯ Our study showed the superiority of TTHT for infant CPR performed by non-health professionals when an emergency call responder advised them over the phone. It seemed to be the best technique for a solo rescuer regardless of previous training.
-
Multicenter Study
Trauma associated with cardiopulmonary resuscitation based on autopsy reports after the 2015 ERC guidelines.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)-related injuries have not been assessed since the 2015 Resuscitation Guidelines were established. ⋯ CPR-related injuries occurred frequently, although those that were life-threatening accounted for only 3% of cases. There were no differences between patients who were resuscitated by bystander(s) or by professionals and no differences between mechanical chest devices or manual resuscitation. Compared with a study based on the 2010 guidelines, similar injuries were found, but with more rib fractures, less visceral organ damage, and fewer life-threatening injuries.
-
We aimed to assess the patients' experience of threat during management of an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in the Emergency Department (ED) and to analyze the impact of this acute stress on day-30 outcomes. ⋯ Stress management in EDs should become a systematic step in the management of patients with ACS. This study emphasizes the importance of multidisciplinary follow-up and early screening of patients at risk of PTSD to improve their outcomes after discharge.