Resuscitation
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Forty-one children aged 11-12 years received tuition in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and subsequently completed questionnaires to assess their theoretical knowledge and attitudes their likelihood of performing CPR. Although most children scored well on theoretical knowledge, this did not correlate with an assessment of practical ability using training manikins. In particular only one child correctly called for help after the casualty was found to be unresponsive, and none telephoned for an ambulance before starting resuscitation. These omissions have important implications for the teaching of CPR and the resulting effectiveness of community CPR programmes.
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Comparative Study
Effects of various degrees of compression and active decompression on haemodynamics, end-tidal CO2, and ventilation during cardiopulmonary resuscitation of pigs.
The effects of various degrees of compression and active decompression during cardiopulmonary resuscitation were tested in a randomized cross-over-design during ventricular fibrillation in eight pigs using an automatic hydraulic chest compression device. Compared with 4/0 (compression/decompression in cm), mean carotid arterial blood flow rose by 60% with 5/0, by 90% with 4/2 and 4/3, and 105% with 5/2. Two cm active decompression increased mean brain and myocardial blood flow by 53% and 37%, respectively, as compared with 4/0. Increasing standard compression from 4 to 5 cm caused no further increase in brain or heart tissue blood flow whether or not combined with active decompression. Tissue blood flow remained unchanged or decreased when active decompression (4/3) caused that 50% of the pigs were lifted from the table due to the force required. Myocardial blood flow was reduced with 5/0 vs. 4/0 despite no reduction in end decompression coronary perfusion pressure ((aortic-right atrial pressure) (CPP), (7 +/- 8 mmHg with 4/0, 14 +/- 11 mmHg with 5/0)(NS)). End decompression CPP increased by 186% with 4/2 vs. 4/0, by 200% with 4/3, and by 300% with 5/2. Endo-tracheal partial pressure of CO2 was significantly increased during the compression phase of active decompression CPR compared with standard CPR. Active decompression CPR generated an significantly increased ventilation compared with standard CPR. ⋯ Carotid and tissue blood flow, ventilation, and CPP increase with 2 cm of active decompression. An attempt to further increase the level of active decompression or increasing the compression depth from 4 to 5 cm did not improve organ blood flow.
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Asystole in avalanche victims is generally due to asphyxia and not primarily to hypothermia. Hence, on-site establishment of death by asphyxiation would avoid evacuation risks to the rescue party, as well as high costs of transport to, and treatment at, frequently distant specialist centres in cases with a hopeless prognosis. ⋯ When information regarding an air pocket is uncertain in victims buried longer than 45 min, determination of serum potassium (critical level 10 mmol/l) at the nearest hospital becomes an alternative criterion for triage. The proposed guidelines aim to clarify field decision-making for the emergency doctor with respect to discontinuation of resuscitation and limitation of transferral for cardiopulmonary bypass core rewarming to those patients with presumptive reversible hypothermia.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Optimal defibrillation strategy and follow-up of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The Belgian CPCR Study Group.
In the current climate of rising healthcare cost, resuscitation efforts performed outside the hospital are critically evaluated because of their limited success rate in some settings. As part of a quality assurance program between the 1st January 1991 and 31st December 1993, six centres of the Belgian CPCR study group prospectively registered cardiac arrest (CA) patients and their treatment according to the Ustein Style recommendations. ⋯ In a second part of the study we describe long-term management of the 28 surviving VF patients, treated by the single EMS system of Brugge between 1st January 1991 and 30th April 1995: only 6 patients eventually received an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD), whereas coronary revascularization was performed in 9 patients, and 3 patients were discharged on amiodarone only. Satisfactory long-term survival after out-of-hospital VF can be achieved by an early shock followed by advanced life support and appropriate definitive treatment.
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The outcome following a cardiac arrest is affected by the length of time that elapses before cardiopulmonary resuscitation is initiated. Only 10-15% of patients experiencing cardiac arrest in hospital settings survive to discharge. Therefore, the time between cardiac arrest and administration of cardiopulmonary resuscitation in a metropolitan hospital was examined. ⋯ Also in 37% of the cases where a BVM was needed, one was not readily present because of difficulty in locating the crash cart immediately. Although initiation of cardiopulmonary resuscitation within a minute of a cardiac or respiratory arrest is the standard of care, in the non-intensive care in-patient cases surveyed, typically more than a minute elapsed, and frequently 3 or more minutes, before resuscitation was started. If the time elapsing before an arresting in-patient is ventilated can be shortened, which is easily and effectively achieved by mouth-to-mouth or mouth-to-mask resuscitation, an increase in both the survival rate and the number of good neurological outcomes should be expected.