Resuscitation
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Comparative Study
Jaw lift--a simple and effective method to open the airway in children.
Assessment of breathing during resuscitation of children is important. Misjudgement due to failure to open the airway may lead to mouth-to-mouth ventilation in unconscious children who have retained spontaneous breathing efforts, and might lead to completely ineffective ventilation with gastric distension. The efficiency of the standard head tilt-chin lift manoeuvre (HT-CL) and the jaw lift manoeuvre (JL) for opening of the airway in children was investigated. ⋯ The standard HT-CL manoeuvre was insufficient in 12% of the children. JL was more effective than HT-CL in opening the airway in unconscious children who had retained attempts at spontaneous breathing. The JL manoeuvre may, therefore, be recommended in situations when the HT-CL manoeuvre is insufficient.
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Our purpose was to determine if core hypothermia influences physiological responses to norepinephrine (NE); and if rewarming reverses these effects. Animals were instrumented to measure mean arterial pressure (MAP) and cardiac output (CO). Core temperature was manipulated from 37.5 degrees C (normothermia), to 30 degrees C (hypothermia) and the back to 37.5 degrees C (rewarming) using an external arterial-venous femoral shunt. ⋯ The response to NE during hypothermia was a significant increase in MAP only at doses of 1 microg kg(-1) per min (P = 0.03) and 5 microg kg(-1) per min (P = 0.01). The response to NE after rewarming was a significant increase in MAP only at a dose of 5 microg kg(-1) per min (P = 0.03). This study shows that core hypothermia causes a change in physiological response to NE that rewarming does not reverse.
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Comparative Study
Improved haemodynamics with increased compression-decompression rates during ACD-CPR in pigs.
The haemodynamic effects of variations in the compression-decompression frequency, 60, 90 and 120 min(-1) during ACD-CPR, were tested in a randomized cross-over design during ventricular fibrillation (VF) in 12 anaesthetized pigs (17-22 kg) using an automatic hydraulic chest compression-decompression device. There were significant increases with increasing frequency for mean (+/- S. D.) carotid blood flow (17 +/- 5, 25 +/- 9 and 36 +/- 12 ml min(-1), transit time flow probe), cerebral blood flow (17 +/- 7, 30 +/- 17 and 40 +/- 13 ml min(-1) 100 g(-1), radionuclide microspheres) and mean aortic pressure (34 +/- 8, 37 +/- 10 and 43 +/- 7 mmHg), respectively. ⋯ Renal and hepatic blood flow also increased with increasing rate. No significant differences in the expired CO2 levels were observed. In conclusion increasing the compression-decompression frequency from 60 to 90 and 120 min(-1) improved the haemodynamics during ACD-CPR in a pig model with VF.
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Consensus exists that a do-not-attempt-resuscitation order (DNAR) is appropriate if a resuscitation attempt is futile. Less agreement exists when this point is reached. We investigated the influence of three major considerations for in-hospital DNAR orders: expected survival probability after resuscitation, prospects of the patients' current condition without a cardiac arrest and the patients' autonomous decision not to want resuscitation. ⋯ The odds ratio (OR) for the presence of a DNAR order was 37 (CL 14-107) for an estimated life expectancy less than 3 months, 13 (CL 4-41) for a life in a nursing home and four (CL 2-12) for an age of 80 years and older. Expected survival probability after resuscitation and pain were not independently associated with a DNAR order. We conclude that resuscitation is considered futile on the basis of the patients' age and prospects without cardiac arrest and that the impact of expected survival probability on these decisions is small.
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To gain more insight into decision making around the termination of resuscitation (CPR), we studied factors which influenced the time before discontinuing resuscitation, and the criteria on which those decisions were based. These criteria were compared with those of the European Resuscitation Council (ERC) and the American Heart Association (AHA). For this study, we reviewed the audiotapes of resuscitation attempts in a hospital. ⋯ The ERC and the AHA criteria were not sufficient to cover all termination decisions. We conclude that the point in time to terminate resuscitation is not always rationally chosen. Updating of the current guidelines for terminating resuscitation and training resuscitation teams to use these guidelines is recommended.