Annals of emergency medicine
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A case of complete maternal and fetal recovery after prolonged cardiac arrest from massive lidocaine overdose is presented. A 27-year-old woman at 15 weeks gestation had a complete neurologic recovery after 22 minutes of CPR, including 19 minutes of electromechanical dissociation and asystole, with normal fetal heart function and fetal motion confirmed by ultrasound immediately after resuscitation. The patient delivered a healthy and neurologically normal infant at 40 weeks gestation. This is the longest cardiac arrest in early pregnancy reported in the medical literature with normal maternal and fetal outcome.
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Comparative Study
Myocardial oxygen delivery/consumption during cardiopulmonary resuscitation: a comparison of epinephrine and phenylephrine.
Our study compared the effect of high-dose epinephrine with the pure alpha-agonist phenylephrine on regional myocardial blood flow (MBF), myocardial oxygen delivery (MDO2), myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2), and defibrillation rates during CPR. Fifteen swine weighing more than 15 kg were instrumented for measurement of regional MBF using radiolabeled tracer microspheres. Measurements of regional MBF, MDO2, and MVO2 were made during normal sinus rhythm. ⋯ Defibrillation was attempted 3 1/2 minutes after drug administration. There was no significant difference in MBF, MDO2, MVO2, and extraction ratio during normal sinus rhythm and CPR for any of the groups. Total MBF following drug administration was 67.2 +/- 49.4 mL/min/100 g for the group receiving epinephrine 0.2 mg/kg; 7.0 +/- 7.1 mL/min/100 g for the group receiving phenylephrine 0.1 mg/kg; and 36.7 +/- 21.1 mL/min/100 g for the group receiving phenylephrine 1.0 mg/kg.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Sitting oral-tracheal intubation is a useful technique for rapid airway control in the patient for whom maintenance of the upright posture is desirable. The technique consists of introducing the endotracheal tube with the patient in the sitting or semi-sitting position. Specific positioning of both patient and operator is required.
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Volume replacement is critical to the resuscitation of the hemorrhaging patient, but this usually can be accomplished quickly and safely with crystalloid and/or colloid solutions. Red cells should be used in addition to asanguinous fluids in the treatment of tissue hypoxia due to anemia. The need for whole blood as opposed to packed red blood cells is controversial. ⋯ In emergencies in which blood is required immediately before compatibility testing can be completed, O-negative uncrossmatched blood can be requested. Careful blood specimen collection and patient identification prior to transfusion are critical. Practices that emphasize blood conservation, including the use of autologous salvaged blood, are always to the patient's advantage.