Resuscitation
-
Open-chest cardiac massage (OC-CM) provides higher blood pressure and flow than closed-chest compression and may improve the probability of successful resuscitation from cardiac arrest. Its clinical use has been limited by its requirement for a major thoracotomy. The present pilot study tested the technical feasibility of performing effective direct cardiac massage without a major thoracic incision, by using a simple, manually-powered plunger-like device, inserted through a small thoracic incision, to cyclically compress the cardiac ventricles. The method was termed minimally-invasive direct cardiac massage (MID-CM). Systemic blood flow using MID-CM was compared to that with OC-CM, by both direct systemic hemodynamic measurements, cumulative metabolic indicators of the ratio of whole body oxygen delivery and oxygen consumption, and a metabolic index of pulmonary blood flow. ⋯ Systemic Blood Pressure: Aortic systolic and diastolic blood pressures were reduced from baseline levels with both OC-CM and MID-CM. No difference in pressure was noted between OC-CM and MID-CM groups. Pulmonary Artery Pressure: Pulmonary artery systolic pressure was elevated from baseline during OC-CM and MID-CM. Pulmonary artery diastolic pressures remained constant throughout the resuscitation period in both groups. No differences in pulmonary systolic or diastolic pressure were noted between OC-CM and MID-CM groups. A trend towards higher pulmonary systolic pressures appeared with MID-CM. Thermodilution Blood Flow: Cardiac index fell from baseline levels with OC-CM and MID-CM. No difference in cardiac index was noted between OC-CM and MID-CM groups. Metabolic Indices: Mixed venous O2 saturation decreased from baseline levels during resuscitation in both experimental groups, with a further decrease at 30 min compared to 10- and 20-min levels. No difference was noted between OC-CM and MID-CM groups at any point. Arterial pH was reduced from baseline levels at 30 min in both groups compared to baseline but no difference was noted between groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
-
Comparative Study
Combined continuous monitoring of systemic and cerebral oxygen metabolism after cardiac arrest.
Cerebral oxygenation was assessed in 8 patients in cardiac arrest during the 24 h after resuscitation, by continuous fiber-optic monitoring of jugular bulb venous oxygen saturation (SjO2), in conjunction with continuous monitoring of mixed venous oxygen saturation (SvO2). Three patients survived and 5 died. SjO2 and SvO2 patterns were compared between surviving and non-surviving patients with regard to their prognostic and therapeutic implications. ⋯ The high SjO2 of the non-survivors suggests that an inability of damaged neurons to use oxygen may be an indicator of poor neurological outcome in resuscitated patients after cardiac arrest. When SjO2 was < 45%, Sv-O2 was extremely low, reflecting cardiovascular failure after resuscitation. SjO2 may thus serve to warn of deterioration in cardiopulmonary function and serve as a predictor of outcome in cardiac arrest survivors.
-
Resuscitation skills were assessed in a group of 24 anaesthetists of varying experience using 3 pre-determined scenarios. Seventy-nine percent of participants were found to be competent at resuscitation following the guidelines suggested by the Resuscitation Council (UK) in 1989. No one grade of anaesthetist was found to be consistently poor at resuscitation. Anaesthetists by the nature of their jobs may maintain the skills and knowledge of cardiopulmonary resuscitation as well as other groups in the hospital.
-
Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Comparative effectiveness of hypothermia rewarming techniques: radio frequency energy vs. warm water.
The purpose of this study was to compare the rewarming effectiveness of a radio frequency coil (13.56 MHz) at a specific absorption rate (SAR) of 2.5 W/kg (RF) with warm water immersion (40 degrees C) (WW) and an insulated mummy-type insulating sack (IS) under simulated field conditions. Four male subjects, ages 24-35, were immersed in 10 degrees C water for up to 90 min or until their rectal temperatures (Tre) decreased to 35 degrees C. Each subject had 3 trials in which they were immersed. ⋯ IS had significantly greater Tad than either WW or RF (P < 0.05). No significant differences in Tre/t, Tre60, or tad were observed between IS and RF. The results of this study indicate that for mildly hypothermic individuals, active rewarming with RF at a SAR of 2.5 W/kg is less effective than WW and roughly equivalent to passive rewarming with IS.
-
Although high-dose epinephrine during CPR improves coronary perfusion pressure (CoPP) and rate of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in some models, its impact on long term outcome (> or = 72 h) has not been evaluated. Previous studies of sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) therapy during CPR indicate that beneficial effects may be dependent on epinephrine (EPI) dose. We hypothesized that EPI and NaHCO3 given during CPR have a significant impact on long term outcome. ⋯ There was an overall trend toward improved survival at 72 h in rats that received NaHCO3 which was most evident in the EPI 0.1 mg/kg group. We conclude that (1) EPI during CPR has a biphasic dose/response curve in terms of survival, when post-resuscitation effects are left untreated and (2) NaHCO3 doses greater than 1.0 mEq/kg may be necessary to treat the side-effects of high-dose EPI. Further work is needed to determine if treating the immediate post-resuscitation effects of high-dose EPI can prevent detrimental effects on long-term outcome.