Resuscitation
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Resuscitative medicine is an area of intense interest. Rigid protocols exist for dealing with the victim of a acute cardiac arrest. ⋯ We present an overview of post-resuscitative care in the emergency department and algorithms to facilitate that care. Like the treatment protocols used in advanced life support, these algorithms are a suggested way of proceeding with the post-resuscitative care of the victims of arrest.
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Recent studies in swine have suggested that estimating the duration of ventricular fibrillation (VF) could have important implications regarding the selection of the best therapeutic intervention during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Successful defibrillation resulting in a pulsatile rhythm is more likely with VF of short duration, whereas VF of longer duration may require interventions designed to augment myocardial blood flow prior to defibrillation. Duration of VF has been estimated in a swine model by modelling the median frequency (FM) of the VF ECG signal. ⋯ The human data revealed an FM which had two peaks with subsequent gradual decline. The data in swine revealed an FM during VF which decreased initially then increased to a peak followed by a gradual decline. Our preliminary results demonstrate that a characteristic median frequency exists in humans which could be used to estimate the duration of VF.
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Seventeen cynomolgus monkeys under N2O analgesia and sedation were subjected to severe volume-controlled hemorrhagic shock (shed blood volume of 21 or 27 ml/kg). In 12 monkeys, resuscitation was started after increasing periods of hemorrhagic shock from 30 min to 5 h. In five additional monkeys, volume-controlled hemorrhage was modified at hemorrhagic shock 30 min to control MAP at 30 mmHg: resuscitation was started at hemorrhagic shock of 2 h. ⋯ None of the monkeys developed pulmonary dysfunction or functional or morphologic evidence of cerebral damage. This study establishes a new hemorrhagic shock-resuscitation model simulating field-to-hospital life support. Severe hemorrhagic shock with MAP 30-40 mmHg for 90-120 min (without trauma or sepsis) can lead to complete functional recovery after transient malfunction of liver and kidneys.