Critical care medicine
-
Critical care medicine · Dec 1989
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialComparison of prehospital conventional and simultaneous compression-ventilation cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Nine hundred ninety-four patients were enrolled in a field trial in which ambulance crews were randomly assigned to use simultaneous compression-ventilation (SC-V) CPR or conventional CPR procedures in the prehospital setting. Survival to hospital admission and to discharge was superior in the conventional CPR group vs. the experimental group (p less than .01). In a subset of adult cases whose causes of arrest were nontraumatic, survivor rates still favored the conventional CPR group: 33.5% of 337 vs. 22.5% of 365 (p less than .001). ⋯ There were no statistically significant differences in the Glasgow coma scores between surviving patients in either group at 24 h post-hospital admission or discharge. It is concluded that survival in the SC-V CPR group was lower, likely reflecting a deleterious effect of the experimental technique of resuscitation. Also noted was that 14% of the control patients and 6% of the experimental patients survived with manual CPR alone.
-
Critical care medicine · Dec 1989
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialSuccinylcholine and atropine for premedication of the newborn infant before nasotracheal intubation: a randomized, controlled trial.
Twenty preterm newborn infants were randomized to receive either atropine alone (20 micrograms/kg) or atropine plus succinylcholine (2 mg/kg) before nasotracheal intubation. Heart rate, BP, transcutaneous PO2, and intracranial pressure were monitored continuously before, during, and after intubation. No infants developed bradycardia or hypoxia. ⋯ BP increased during intubation in both groups, and the overall peak BP was not significantly different between the groups. Intubation was significantly shorter in the infants receiving succinylcholine. Premedication with succinylcholine and atropine will facilitate intubation of neonates, and ameliorate the adverse physiologic consequences of this procedure.
-
Critical care medicine · Dec 1989
Comparative StudyEpinephrine versus methoxamine in survival postventricular fibrillation and cardiopulmonary resuscitation in dogs.
Previous studies have indicated that methoxamine (an alpha adrenergic receptor agonist) may provide an advantage compared to epinephrine (a mixed alpha and beta adrenergic agonist) during cardiac arrest and CPR. To test this theory, we compared the effects of bolus injections of epinephrine vs. methoxamine on survival, hemodynamic variables, blood gases, and blood lactate concentrations during ventricular fibrillation and CPR in 12 dogs. Each dog underwent a 3-min fibrillatory arrest followed by 10 min of fibrillation and CPR, at which time the animals were defibrillated. ⋯ Both epinephrine and methoxamine produced identical survival rates (5/6) with no differences in coronary perfusion pressure gradients or blood gases (aortic, venous, or great cardiac venous pH, PaO2, or PaCO2) during CPR. Also, there were no differences between the two study groups in myocardial lactate or oxygen extraction ratios during CPR. We conclude that in the dosages tested in our experimental model, epinephrine and methoxamine produce similar results in the variables which we measured.
-
Critical care medicine · Dec 1989
Incidence, physiologic description, compensatory mechanisms, and therapeutic implications of monitored events.
We described 663 unanticipated monitored circulatory events in 247 high-risk surgical patients by simultaneous invasive and noninvasive hemodynamic and oxygen transport monitoring systems. Unanticipated monitored events were defined as sudden reductions (greater than 20%) in cardiac index (CI), PaO2, SaO2, transcutaneous PO2 (PtcO2), and PtcO2/PaO2 index, or decreases to the lower limits of satisfactory values, specifically: PaO2 less than 70 torr, SaO2 less than 95%, PtcO2 less than 50 torr, and PtcO2/PaO2 less than 0.6. Essentially, monitored events are the small variations superimposed on the overall physiologic patterns that describe the entire course of critical illnesses. ⋯ At the nadir, cardiac functions decreased in about two thirds, perfusion decreased in over half, and lung function fell in only one quarter of the events. Recovery occurred with increased cardiac function in two thirds, improved perfusion in over half, and increased lung function in less than one fifth of these monitored events. Noninvasive and invasive hemodynamic and oxygen transport variables were measured simultaneously to evaluate compensatory and decompensatory patterns.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
-
Critical care medicine · Dec 1989
Comparative StudyBrain pH effects of NaHCO3 and Carbicarb in lactic acidosis.
The effects of iv sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) and Carbicarb, an experimental buffer, were compared in a rat model of lactic acidosis induced by controlled hemorrhage and asphyxia. Although both NaHCO3 and Carbicarb were effective at alkalinizing the arterial blood in this model, NaHCO3 administration resulted in a rise in PaCO2 where Carbicarb did not (+9 +/- 2 vs. +2 +/- 2 torr at 2 min after infusion, p less than .01). Moreover, NaHCO3 resulted in a small decrease in intracellular brain pH as measured with P-31 nuclear magnetic resonance where Carbicarb afforded intracellular brain alkalinization (-0.03 +/- 0.01 vs. +0.08 +/- 0.02 pH units at 2 min, p less than .01). If these data are confirmed clinically, Carbicarb may offer advantages over NaHCO3 under conditions of fixed or limited ventilation.