Resuscitation
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The authors analysed a series of 557 consecutive patients who suffered cardiorespiratory arrest at the Dante Pazzanese Institute of Cardiology (DPIC) during a period of 5 years in order to examine factors predicting successful resuscitation and long-term survival. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) maneuvers were tried in 536 patients, with the following results: 284 patients (53%) died immediately, another 102 (19%) died within the first 24 h after the cardiac arrest and 150 patients (28%) survived more than 24 h. Among these, 65 (12.1%) died in the first month after cardiac arrest and other 29 (5.4%) died after that period. ⋯ None of the 49 patients with cyanotic congenital heart disease survived. The heart arrest was mostly caused by heart failure (55.8%) and primary arrhythmia (17.2%) in the whole group, whereas the survivor group showed primary arrhythmia in 81.7% and heart failure in 7.3%. In those patients where the initial mechanism of cardiac arrest was ventricular fibrillation, 33.2% survived more than 1 month, while among those on ventricular asystole, only 3.4% survived more than 1 month.
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Modern external (closed-chest) cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) basic life support (BLS) gives everyone anywhere a chance to initiate the reversal of death from airway obstruction, apnea, or pulselessness. The history of modern CPR has its roots around 1900, but lay dormant for half a century, until in the 1950s several fortunate circumstances merged to allow for documentation of Steps A (airway control by head-tilt and jaw-thrust), B (breathing control by mouth-to-mouth ventilation), and C (circulation control by closed-chest cardiac massage, i.e. chest compressions) and their combination into BLS Steps A-B-C. BLS is only for borderline emergency oxygenation, i.e. ⋯ A. and several role players with keen interest in resuscitation were needed to enable the systematic research (Steps A and B), a chance rediscovery (Step C), and the integration of BLS with advanced life support (ALS, drugs and defibrillation, transferred from open-chest CPR) and brain-oriented prolonged life support (PLS, intensive care) to result in the development of an effective cardiopulmonary-cerebral resuscitation system. A fertile environment led rapidly to the development of resuscitation delivery systems in hospitals and communities. This paper is a story told by one of the role players.
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This study examined plasma epinephrine (E) and norepinephrine (NE) concentrations, pH, and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) in a cardiac arrest model. Twenty-three domestic swine (15-26 kg) were anesthetized with ketamine 20 mg/kg, i.m. and alpha-chloralose 25 mg/kg, i.v. and ventilated with a respirator. Catheters were placed in the right ventricle, left ventricle and femoral arteries for MAP recordings and blood pH sampling every 2 min. ⋯ An analysis of variance revealed that the CE and I routes were significantly different (P less than 0.05) from the P group and that all three groups were different (P less than 0.05) from the C. Plasma E and NE concentrations at 0, 6, 10, 12, 20 and 30 min post arrest in the C group were, respectively: 3 and 10, 94 and 327, 119 and 329, 92 and 234, 33 and 135, and 127 and 62 ng/ml, respectively. All 3 groups receiving NaHCO3 demonstrated similar patterns and were not significantly different from C when compared with a 2-way analysis of variance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Neostigmine was first used 50 years ago to treat sinus tachycardia and paroxysmal auricular tachycardia. Then there were reports of successful treatment by neostigmine of other forms of supraventricular tachycardias. However, reports of sudden death using neostigmine for reversal of neuromuscular blockade at the end of an operation, which were not properly treated with atropine abandoned the use of neostigmine as an antiarrhythmic drug. ⋯ It gave an immediate bradycardic effect in all three patients. The use of a low-dose neostigmine intravenously for an immediate treatment of supraventricular tachycardia is a novel suggestion. It has to be further evaluated and compared to the conventional drugs used like digoxin, verapamil, propranolol or esmolol.