Resuscitation
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
The impact of introducing medical emergency team system on the documentations of vital signs.
To study the rate of documentation of vital signs in the period before the occurrence of an adverse event or emergency team call and to measure the effect of introducing the medical emergency team (MET) system on the rate of such documentation. ⋯ The documentation of vital signs in the period before adverse events was commonly incomplete with a particular deficiency in the documentation of the respiratory rate. Introduction of a MET system was associated with improvement in the rate of documentation of vital signs.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Influence of airway management strategy on "no-flow-time" in a standardized single rescuer manikin scenario (a comparison between LTS-D and I-gel).
In 2005 the European Resuscitation Council (ERC) published a revised version of the guidelines for Advanced Life Support (ALS). One of the aims was to reduce the time without chest compression in the first period of cardiac arrest (no-flow-time; NFT). We evaluated in a manikin study the influence on NFT using the single use laryngeal tube with suction option (LTS-D) compared to single use I-gel for emergency airway management. ⋯ In our manikin study, NFT was comparable using the LTS-D and the I-gel. Therefore, for personnel not experienced in tracheal intubation, the LTS-D and the I-gel seem to be equal alternatives in establishing the airway during cardiac arrest. However, relevant clinical studies are appropriate because any change in guidelines in this area must be based on clinical evidence.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
Effect of cooling after human cardiac arrest on myocardial infarct size.
The Hypothermia after Cardiac Arrest (HACA) trial assessed whether mild therapeutic hypothermia improved the rate of good neurological recovery in patients after ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest of presumed cardiac origin. We evaluated the impact of hypothermia on myocardial injury. ⋯ Cooling after successful resuscitation for ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest did not influence infarct size. Cautious interpretation of the subgroup analysis may indicate a favourable trend for early cooling.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
Reduced hands-off-time and time to first shock in CPR according to the ERC Guidelines 2005.
Chest compressions and early defibrillation are crucial in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). The Guidelines 2005 brought major changes to the basic life support and automated external defibrillator (BLS-AED) algorithm. We compared the European Resuscitation Council's Guidelines 2000 (group '00) and 2005 (group '05) on hands-off-time (HOT) and time to first shock (TTFS) in an experimental model. ⋯ In this manikin setting, HOT and TTFS improved with BLS-AED performed according to Guidelines 2005.