Resuscitation
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Multicenter Study
Prognostication after cardiac arrest: Results of an international, multi-professional survey.
We explored preferences for prognostic test performance characteristics and error tolerance in decisions regarding withdrawal or continuation of life-sustaining therapy (LST) after cardiac arrest in a diverse cohort of medical providers. ⋯ Medical providers are comfortable with low acceptable FPR for withdrawal (≤0.1%) and continuation (≤1%) of LST after cardiac arrest. These FPRs may be lower than can be achieved with current prognostic modalities.
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Multicenter Study
International variation in survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a validation study of the Utstein template.
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) survival varies greatly between communities. The Utstein template was developed and promulgated to improve the comparability of OHCA outcome reports, but it has undergone limited empiric validation. We sought to assess how much of the variation in OHCA survival between emergency medical services (EMS) across the globe is explained by differences in the Utstein factors. We also assessed how accurately the Utstein factors predict OHCA survival. ⋯ The Utstein factors explained 51% of the variation in survival to hospital discharge among multiple large geographically separate EMS agencies. This suggests that quality improvement and public health efforts should continue to target modifiable Utstein factors to improve OHCA survival. Further study is required to identify the reasons for the variation that is incompletely understood.
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The carotid artery blood flow (CABF) or cerebral blood flow (CBF) achieved with current techniques of cardiac compression in humans are unknown. Animal experiments may provide useful information on such flows and on possible techniques to optimize them. ⋯ During experimental cardiac compression, compared to baseline, CABF appears to decrease much more than CBF. However results should be regarded with caution. They are affected by ancillary interventions and measurement methods, variability is marked and, in experiments measuring CABF and CBF simultaneously, their ratios range well outside physiologically plausible values.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Improving the cost-effectiveness of laypersons' paediatric basic life support skills training: A randomised non-inferiority study.
To compare dyad (training in pairs without an instructor) with resource-intensive instructor-led training for laypersons' paediatric resuscitation skills in a non-inferiority trial and examine cost-effectiveness of the training methods. ⋯ Instructor-led training was the most effective but also the most expensive training method, making it less cost-effective than dyad training. When the aim is to train for quantity rather than quality, dyad training would be the preferred choice of training method.
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Observational Study
Repeated adrenaline doses and survival from an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
Adrenaline is the primary drug of choice for resuscitation from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Although adrenaline may increase the chance of achieving return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), there is limited evidence that repeated doses of adrenaline improves overall survival, and increasing evidence of a detrimental effect on neurological function in survivors. This paper reports the relationship between repeated doses of adrenaline and survival in a cohort of patients attended by the London Ambulance Service in the United Kingdom. ⋯ Our study indicates that repeated doses of adrenaline are associated with decreasing odds of survival. There were no survivors amongst patients requiring more than 10 doses of adrenaline.