Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · Oct 1988
ReviewIncomplete global myocardial ischemia during cardiac arrest and resuscitation.
During cardiac arrest (no flow) and CPR (low flow), the onset of myocardial ischemia is followed by myocardial respiratory acidosis. Myocardial contractility is more decreased by respiratory than by metabolic acidosis. We demonstrated in a porcine model of cardiac arrest and in human patients increases in mixed venous PCO2 during CPR, whereas PaCO2 was decreased. ⋯ In great cardiac vein blood, even more profound respiratory acidosis with only minor decreases in bicarbonate and only moderate increases in lactate were observed. Intramyocardial pH was profoundly decreased. The severity of respiratory acidosis as a determinant of resuscitability and survival should be further investigated.
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Critical care medicine · Oct 1988
Clinical TrialPhilosophical, ethical, and legal aspects of resuscitation medicine. I. Deferred consent and justification of resuscitation research.
Informed prospective consent for clinical resuscitation research may not be possible. Deferred consent is an untenable notion. Consent to continue in research cannot be used to support a claim that there was, or would have been, consent to the initiation of research. The conditions for the justifiability of resuscitation research without informed consent are: a) patient is comatose; b) lifesaving treatment must be given immediately; c) given all available evidence, there is reason to believe that the probability of death or severe deficit with experimental or control therapy is not greater than the probability of death or severe deficit on usual therapy; d) given all available evidence, there is reason to believe that the probability of normal or near-normal outcome is greater on experimental or control therapy than on usual therapy; and e) the study can provide evidence on whether there is a significant difference between experimental and control therapies in the incidence of normal or near-normal survival.