Der Anaesthesist
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13 cases of severe cerebral trauma were subjected to varying degrees of elevation of the upper trunk (0 degrees, 15 degrees, 30 degrees, 45 degrees) and to head-raising only (0 degrees, 15 degrees, 30 degrees). The intracranial pressure and mean arterial pressure were measured in these positions. On raising the upper half of the body by 15 degrees, intracranial pressure fell from a mean of 35.3 mm Hg to 28.7 mm Hg, and to 25.2 mm Hg on raising to 30 degrees. ⋯ In contrast, the mean arterial pressure fell constantly as elevation increased, resulting in a decrease in cerebral perfusion pressure at levels above 30 degrees. In no cases did raising of the head alone result in a lowering of pressure. Instead, potentially dangerous increases were observed.
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This study compares the effect of epinephrine (11 dogs) with that of the combination of epinephrine with calcium (10 dogs) in CPR after anoxial cardiac arrest. In the epinephrine group resuscitation was successful in all 11 dogs within 4 minutes. ⋯ In the survivors of the calcium group cardiac function was significantly impaired: 1. decreased left ventricular pressure (LVP) and contractility (dp/dt max), 2. increased afterload, 3. decreased cardiac output inspite of increased heart rate, 4. as a consequence, reduced perfusion of the vital organs. - These results foster the conclusion that calcium should not be used henceforth in CPR. Epinephrine was and is still the drug of choice in resuscitation after cardiac arrest.