Resuscitation
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Review Case Reports
Survival of a subarachnoid hemorrhage patient who presented with prehospital cardiopulmonary arrest: case report and review of the literature.
A 63-year-old woman was admitted to the intensive care unit after resuscitation from prehospital cardiopulmonary arrest (CPA). A brain CT scan revealed a subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), which was considered to be the cause of the CPA. The patient recovered neurologically after admission, and the elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) was controlled by inducing mild hypothermia. ⋯ After rehabilitation, the patient was discharged to her home with severe disability. Although aneurysmal SAH is one of the most common causes of CPA, survival of SAH patients after CPA is rare. This case illustrates the ability and possibility of multidisciplinary treatment, including the use of endovascular techniques and mild hypothermia, to improve the outcome of SAH patients with CPA who have been considered to be inoperable and untreatable.
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Insufficient oxygenation, ventilation and gastric inflation with subsequent regurgitation of stomach contents is a major hazard of bag-valve-face mask ventilation during the basic life support phase of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). The European Resuscitation Council has recommended smaller tidal volumes of approximately 500 ml as an effort to reduce gastric inflation; furthermore, the intubating laryngeal mask airway and the laryngeal tube have been recently developed in order to provide rapid ventilation and to secure the airway. The purpose of our study was to examine whether usage of a newly developed medium-size self-inflating bag (maximum volume, 1100 ml) in association with the intubating laryngeal mask airway, and laryngeal tube may provide adequate lung ventilation, while reducing the risk of gastric inflation in a bench model simulating the initial phase of CPR. ⋯ M. lung tidal volumes (605+/-22 vs. 832+/-4 ml, and 666+/-27 vs. 887+/-37 ml, respectively), but comparable peak airway pressures. No gastric inflation occurred when using both devices with either ventilation bag. In conclusion, both the intubating laryngeal mask airway and laryngeal tube in combination with both an 1100 and 1500 ml maximum volume self inflating bag proved to be valid alternatives for emergency airway management in a bench model of a simulated unintubated cardiac arrest victim.
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In Singapore, all public emergency ambulances are equipped with semi-automatic external defibrillators and the crew is trained in their use. This is the first paper from Singapore reporting the survival rate in patients presenting to an urban public hospital with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) who developed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). All consecutive patients who presented to the ED of a public hospital with OHCA or ACS were surveyed from 1 April 1999 to 30 September 1999. ⋯ Twenty (17.4%) of the OHCA patients had return of spontaneous circulation after resuscitation in the ED. Four patients (3.5%), all with an initial rhythm of VF were discharged alive from the hospital. Much remains to be done to reduce the time interval to first DC shock for the OHCA group.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The effect of differing support surfaces on the efficacy of chest compressions using a resuscitation manikin model.
External chest compression (ECC) efficacy is influenced by factors including the surface supporting the patient. Air-filled support surfaces are deflated for cardiopulmonary resuscitation, with little evidence to substantiate this. We investigated the effect that differing support surfaces had on ECC efficacy using a CPR manikin model. ⋯ The efficacy of ECC is affected by the support surfaces. There seems little evidence to substantiate deflating all air-filled support surfaces for CPR.
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The oesophageal-tracheal Combitube (Kendall-Sheridan Catheter Corp., Argyle, NY) is a device designed for difficult airways and emergency intubation. The manufacturer recommends that the Combitube size 37F SA be used in patients with a height of between 122 and 152 cm. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether ventilation is effective and reliable in anaesthetized patients taller than 152 cm using the size 37F SA in the oesophageal position. ⋯ The trachea could be directly intubated with the Combitube in the oesophageal position in patients with normal airways and in patients involved in trauma. In all patients in the emergency group, blind insertion of the Combitube resulted in the device being placed in the oesophagus. The airway protection appears to be adequate.