The American journal of emergency medicine
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Outcome after cardiac arrest is strongly related to whether the patient has ventricular fibrillation at the time the emergency medical service (EMS) arrives on the scene. The occurrence of various arrhythmias at the time of EMS arrival among patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest was studied in relation to the interval from collapse and whether cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was initiated by a bystander. The patients studied were all those with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Goteborg, Sweden, between 1980 and 1992 in whom CPR was attempted by the arriving EMS and for whom the interval between collapse and the arrival of EMS was known. ⋯ There was a successive decline in occurrence of such arrhythmias with time. However, when the interval exceeded 20 minutes, ventricular fibrillation/tachycardia was still observed in 27% of cases. Bystander CPR increased the occurrence of such arrhythmias regardless of the interval between collapse and EMS arrival.
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The appropriateness of aggressive resuscitation in many clinical settings has been questioned. Survival rates from cardiac arrest in the elderly are generally reported as poor, and satisfactory results from resuscitation attempts prolonged beyond 15 minutes are said to be rare. It was the purpose of this study to examine success rates for resuscitation in a cohort of elderly inpatients suffering cardiac arrest. ⋯ No significant difference in age or presenting rhythm of survivors versus nonsurvivors could be demonstrated, although a trend to more frequent ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia was seen (P = .059, Fisher's exact). Time for resuscitation averaged 25.75 +/- 9.2 minutes for survivors and 32.6 +/- 22.1 minutes for nonsurvivors. Survival to hospital discharge occurs in 9% of in-hospital cardiac arrests in the elderly following average CPR times substantially in excess of 15 minutes.
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Drowning is a significant cause of death in children and young adults. It is thought to result from the inhalation of either fresh or sea water resulting in lung damage and ventilation-perfusion mismatching. ⋯ Six responded dramatically clinically and radiographically within 24 hours, and most did not have significant alterations of their serum electrolyte levels, especially serum chloride. On the basis of the rapid clearing of the pulmonary edema and the lack of evidence of significant fluid aspiration, neurogenic pulmonary edema is postulated to have played a role in the development of the pulmonary edema in these patients.
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The routine use of sodium bicarbonate in patients with cardiac arrest has been discouraged, with the benefit of outcome evaluation. Current recommendations include an elaborate stratification of circumstances in which bicarbonate is to be used. The physiological and clinical aspects of bicarbonate administration during cardiopulmonary resuscitation in animal and human studies were reviewed. ⋯ Likewise, bicarbonate may have adverse effects in each of these areas. The preponderance of evidence suggests that bicarbonate is not detrimental and may be helpful to outcome from cardiac arrest. An objective reappraisal of the empirical use of bicarbonate or other buffer agents in the appropriate "therapeutic window" for cardiac patients may be warranted.
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To determine if there is any effect of the full moon on emergency department (ED) patient volume, ambulance runs, admissions, or admissions to a monitored unit, a retrospective analysis of the hospital electronic records of all patients seen in an ED during a 4-year period was conducted in an ED of a suburban community hospital. A full moon occurred 49 times during the study period. ⋯ No significant differences were found in total patient visits, ambulance runs, admissions to the hospital, or admissions to a monitored unit on days of the full moon. The occurrence of a full moon has no effect on ED patient volume, ambulance runs, admissions, or admissions to a monitored unit.