Resuscitation
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Extracorporeal life support (ECLS) is associated with a high mortality rate in patients with preexisting multiple organ failure. To achieve better outcomes of ECLS in this high risk group, an understanding of the real impact of preexisting organ dysfunction on ECLS-associated mortality is necessary. ⋯ SOFA score is a practical assessment tool and is predictive of ECLS-associated mortality in non-postcardiotomy patients. Patients having cardiac arrest requiring CPR or acute renal failure requiring dialysis before ECLS may have inferior ECLS outcomes.
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Patients' outcomes after prolonged cardiac arrest are often grim. The aim of this study was to find the longest period of normovolemic, normothermic, cardiac arrest no-flow after which good neurologic outcome can be achieved with conventional therapies. ⋯ In our model, the limit of normovolemic, normothermic, cardiac arrest no-flow time, followed by ACLS, CPB, and prolonged mild hypothermia, seems to be 13 min.
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The optimum duration of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) prior to first rescue shock is unknown. Clinical trials have used 90 and 180 s. Neither of these durations may be optimal. We sought to determine the optimum duration of CPR prior to first defibrillation attempt and whether this varied depending on the duration of ventricular fibrillation (VF). In this porcine model of basic life support, our outcomes were rates of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), survival, and coronary perfusion pressure (CPP). ⋯ ROSC and survival were equivalent regardless of VF duration and CPR duration. When CPR begins late, CPPs are low, stressing the importance of early CPR. We do not recommend 300 s of CPR unless a defibrillator is unavailable.
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The effect of restoring intravascular volume with polyethylene glycol (PEG) conjugated to human serum albumin (PEG-Alb) on systemic parameters and microvascular hemodynamics after hemorrhagic shock resuscitation was studied in the hamster window chamber model. Moderate hemorrhagic shock was induced by controlled arterial bleeding of 50% of blood volume, and hypovolemia was maintained for 1h. Fluid resuscitation was accomplished by infusion of 25% of blood volume and recovery was followed over 90 min. ⋯ Systemic and microvascular recovery was best and most rapid with PEG-Alb and followed by HSA10 and HSA5. Only recovery with PEG-Alb was sustained beyond 90 min. Hemodynamic functional benefits of PEG-Alb and the potential disadvantages associated with HSA, suggest PEG-Alb as better resuscitation solution.
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We tested the hypothesis that the frequency of shock success differs between initial and recurrent episodes of ventricular fibrillation (VF). ⋯ We observed no significant difference in the frequency of shock success between initial and recurrent episodes of VF using this AED with a 150 J fixed-energy protocol. VF recurrence is common and does not adversely affect shock success, ROSC or survival.