Resuscitation
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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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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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Fifty years ago, the ad hoc committee of the Harvard medical school provided the influential first guidance on confirming death using neurological criteria (DNC). Now 70% of countries have a legal or professional framework enabling DNC. ⋯ The legacy of the Harvard ad hoc committee has been a continuing development of our concepts of human death. There is a growing acceptance that ultimately all human death is brain based whether diagnosed using neurological criteria or using circulatory criteria after cardiac arrest.
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Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) continues to be a leading cause of mortality worldwide. In Canada over 40,000 cardiac arrests that occur each year, a majority occur unexpectedly outside of the hospital setting. However, the reality is that without rapid and appropriate treatment within minutes, most victims will die before reaching the hospital. ⋯ However, in spite of this mounting base of evidence, clinicians continue to report concerns over a paucity of robust data showing definitive eCPR effectiveness compared with conventional resuscitation. This review will explore the ethical issues related to the impact eCPR might have on the orthodoxy pertaining to current resuscitation strategies, the impact of shifting decision-making on families particularly in dealing with a "bridge to nowhere" scenario, a call to accounting for greater data integrity and improved outcome reporting to assess eCPR effectiveness, and addressing the "Should we just do it" question. A recommendation is proposed for the creation of an ethics consultation service to assist families and staff in dealing with the invariable value conflicts and stresses likely to arise.