Resuscitation
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Epinephrine is used to increase coronary perfusion pressure and improve myocardial blood flow during cardiac arrest. Alternative vasopressors may have hemodynamic advantages over epinephrine. The purpose of this investigation was to test the effect of the vasopressor angiotensin II on myocardial blood flow in a swine model of cardiac arrest. ⋯ This fell to 15.1 +/- 19.9 with CPR alone, and rose to 66.9 +/- 69.8 following angiotensin II administration (P = 0.04; by two tailed T-test). Myocardial blood flow following ROSC further increased to 212.6 +/- 58.0. Angiotensin II in a dose of 50 micrograms/kg significantly increases myocardial blood flow in this model of cardiac arrest.
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This investigation was designed to test the hypothesis that active compression-decompression resuscitation is able to independently provide improved levels of minute ventilation when compared to high-impulse manual cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Eight adult beagles (10-15 kg) were studied after induction of ventricular fibrillation. Single 1-min CPR trials were performed while arterial blood gases and minute ventilation were monitored. ⋯ We conclude that ACD CPR provides improved levels of minute ventilation when compared to high-impulse manual CPR in this canine model of cardiac arrest. Improved minute ventilation may contribute to the mechanism of improved cardiopulmonary hemodynamics reported in previous investigations of ACD CPR. Further investigation is warranted to determine the effects of ACD CPR on pulmonary ventilation in human subjects after cardiac arrest.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Effects of induced hypothermia in patients with septic adult respiratory distress syndrome.
To test the hypothesis that treatment with hypothermia affects the course of overwhelming acute respiratory failure associated with sepsis. ⋯ This study suggests that hypothermia was effective in improving oxygenation and survival in patients with severe ARDS associated with sepsis, even though VO2 was unchanged.
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Standard two-resuscitator cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) (one resuscitator providing Bag Valve Mask (BVM) ventilation and one chest compressions) was compared with a modified method where one resuscitator held the mask while the second provided ventilation and compressions. Twenty-two subjects used both methods in random order on a recording manikin equipped to measure minute volume (Vm), tidal volume (Vt), respiratory rate (RR), compression rate (CR) and depth. Vm and Vt were greater with modified CPR, but the CR was slower. ⋯ D. 37), > 51 mm 38% (S. D. 38)). Modified CPR greatly improves ventilation but reduces CR.
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Comparative Study
End-tidal CO2 and plasma lactate level: a comparison of their use as parameters for evaluating successful CPR.
Serial changes of end-tidal CO2 (ETCO2) and plasma lactate levels during CPR have been described as useful to investigate or evaluate the results of CPR. However, there have been no reports comparing these parameters in the same model. By inducing cardiopulmonary arrest (2-7 min) in 28 Wistar rats, ETCO2 and serum lactate levels were studied after and just before CPR, respectively. ⋯ The lactate levels before CPR in two groups were significantly higher than those of control levels, however there was no significant difference just before the CPR between the two groups. ETCO2 during CPR is a useful indicator for determining the successful application of CPR. However, serum lactate levels sampled just before the onset of CPR did not prove to be a useful indicator of successful CPR in rats.