Annals of emergency medicine
-
Laboratory research should have clinical relevance. Topics should be selected according to need, gaps in knowledge, and opportunities; the investigator's background, expertise, interests, and ambitions; scientific, clinical, and socioeconomic importance; and feasibility of successful performance and conclusion. The current explosion of knowledge and sophistication of methods will require research by multidisciplinary teams. ⋯ In cardiac arrest research, hearts and brains "too good to die" offer many challenges. In trauma research, particular challenges include protection-preservation during uncontrolled hemorrhagic shock, suspended animation for delayed resuscitation in exsanguination, and prevention of brain swelling after traumatic brain injury. Emergency physicians have the unique opportunity to initiate clinical resuscitation research in unexplored territory: the prehospital arena.
-
More people die in the United States each day of potentially reversible VF than of any other cause of death, reversible or not. Early defibrillation is the definitive treatment. Automated external defibrillation is a proven technology now confirmed to have saved thousands of lives. ⋯ FDA personnel may view such reports of device problems in association with patient deaths as evidence that an intrinsically flawed technology has reached the marketplace without rigorous testing and evaluation. From the clinician's perspective, however, these reports represent a small numerator over a huge denominator of daily, lifesaving clinical use. The non-FDA participants at the two meetings have stated that the FDA complaints appear to be random and reveal a lack of understanding of AED technology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)