Resuscitation
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Unsuccessful defibrillation shocks adversely affect survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Ventricular fibrillation (VF) waveform analysis is the tool-of-choice for the non-invasive prediction of shock success, but surrogate markers of perfusion like end-tidal CO2 (EtCO2) could improve the prediction. The aim of this study was to evaluate EtCO2 as predictor of shock success, both individually and in combination with VF-waveform analysis. ⋯ MEtCO2 predicted defibrillation success only for first shocks. Adding MEtCO2 to VF-waveform analysis in first shocks improved prediction of shock success. VF-waveform features and MEtCO2 were automatically calculated from the device files, so these methods could be introduced in current defibrillators adding only new software.
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Survival from traumatic cardiopulmonary arrest (TCA) has been reported at a rate as low as 0-2.6% in the civilian pre-hospital setting, and many consider resuscitation of this group to be futile. The aim of this investigation was to describe patients who received cardiac massage during TCA in a battlefield setting; we also aimed to identify predictors of survival. ⋯ We report a 13% survival to 30 days among all patients receiving cardiac massage in a battlefield setting. Closed-chest cardiac massage predicted survival among IH TCA victims who also received intravenous medications in this review of combat-related TCA.
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We investigated the mechanism and extent of myocardial injury associated with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). ⋯ Significant myocardial injury associated with OHCA occurs in the presence of acute culprit lesion while extent of myocardial injury in stable or absent coronary disease is significantly smaller and correlates with the duration and intensity of cardiac resuscitation. Admission cTnI, although combined with post-resuscitation ECG, have insufficient accuracy to securely predict presence of acute culprit lesion.
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In terms of treatment options, the underlying cause of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has an impact on survival. This study aimed to examine the frequencies of different causes of OHCA and their outcomes using data from a national resuscitation registry. ⋯ The most common causes of OHCA are cardiac events and hypoxia. Depending on the underlying cause, outcome after pre-hospital CPR varies widely with a survival rate with good neurological outcome ranging from 0.9 to 14%.