Annals of emergency medicine
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CPR has been incorporated into emergency cardiac care with the evolution of both basic and advanced life support components. To date, however, the psychological issues associated with these skills have not been addressed. ⋯ This paper describes ongoing research on the impact of CPR on the rescuer, discusses a method of talking to families after a loved one has suddenly died, and provides insights into the psychological dysfunctions that emergency personnel may be exposed to. The technique and importance of critical incident debriefing following an unsuccessful CPR attempt is discussed.
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Review Comparative Study
The complexity of comparing different EMS systems--a survey of EMS systems in Europe.
In Europe, emergency medical care has developed since the Middle Ages in each country, even within regions of a country, resulting in a patchwork of definitions, legislations, and systems. As a consequence, emergency medical care was implemented differently according to sociocultural, geographic, political, and religious differences between and within individual European countries. The objective of this survey was to describe the emergency medical services (EMS) systems in place throughout Europe, the type and qualification of the personnel, citizen-CPR knowledge, and experiences with automated external defibrillator programs. ⋯ To describe the EMS system, a uniform nomenclature is required. The Utstein "template" style could be proposed as the guideline to describe individual systems. The European Resuscitation Council could contribute in coordinating and standardizing the various aspects of emergency medical care in Europe, with detailed registration, medical coordination, and medical regulation being the principal working rules.
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Patients who suffer an in-hospital cardiac arrest represent a neglected and underutilized resource for resuscitation research. There exists an unwritten, but widely held, belief among resuscitation researchers that the in-hospital arrest population is unsuitable for resuscitation research because it is composed mostly of patients whose cardiac arrest is the terminal event of a fatal illness. Despite the large numbers of hospitalized patients on whom cardiac resuscitation is attempted each year, there are few reports and even less true research devoted to this clinical problem. This article, which is intended to be provocative, reviews and summarizes the existing literature on in-hospital resuscitation from cardiac arrest, considers the advantages of resuscitation research in this setting, and concludes with a challenge to resuscitation researchers.
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Review
Use of tetracaine, epinephrine, and cocaine as a topical anesthetic in the emergency department.
The combination of tetracaine, epinephrine, and cocaine has gained wide acceptance as a topical anesthetic agent for use on pediatric dermal lacerations in the ED. This is despite the fact that the optimal dose and formulation have yet to be determined. TAC can be applied painlessly to wounds and is about as effective as lidocaine infiltration for anesthetizing pediatric facial and scalp lacerations. ⋯ Close medical monitoring of the patient is essential to detect signs of toxicity. Research on other topical agents such as tetracaine with epinephrine is also needed. Although anesthetizing wounds painlessly remains a worthy goal, exposing patients to added and unknown risks and increasing the cost of health care is unacceptable.
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The increased prevalence of rodents resistant to warfarin led to the development of the hydroxycoumarin anticoagulant brodifacoum. A 25-year-old man attempted suicide by consuming four boxes of d-CON Mouse-Prufe II; each box contains 42 g of bait that is 0.005% brodifacoum. He presented to a hospital nine days later with syncope, hematochezia, gross hematuria, epistaxis, anemia, and a severe coagulopathy. ⋯ Neurologic status was initially normal, but in the emergency department he suddenly became comatose soon after emesis was induced with syrup of ipecac. Computed tomography of the brain revealed a subarachnoid hemorrhage that led to brain death less than 24 hours later. This case demonstrates the severe and prolonged coagulopathy that can result from ingestion of brodifacoum, a compound that has a toxic potency about 200-fold that of warfarin and a half-life as much as 60 times longer.