Resuscitation
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Comparative Study
The effect of intravenous magnesium administration on aortic, right atrial and coronary perfusion pressures during CPR in swine.
To determine the effect of magnesium administration on aortic, right atrial and coronary perfusion pressure (CPP) during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). ⋯ In this model of prolonged cardiac arrest, the administration of magnesium with epinephrine appeared to have a negative effect on aortic pressures during CPR. Further study is needed to determine the confounding effect of serum bicarbonate on the response to epinephrine and magnesium during CPR.
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Comparative Study
Quality and efficiency of bystander CPR. Belgian Cerebral Resuscitation Study Group.
Incorrectly performed bystander CPR might compromise survival of the cardiac arrest patient. We therefore evaluated the outcome in 3306 out-of-hospital primary cardiac arrests of which 885 received bystander CPR. bystanders performed CPR correctly in 52%, incorrectly in 11%, 31% performed only external chest compressions (ECC) and 6% only mouth-to-mouth ventilation (MMV). ⋯ Bystander CPR might have a beneficial effect on survival by maintaining the heart in ventricular fibrillation by ECC. A negative effect of badly performed bystander CPR was not observed compared to cases which had not received bystander CPR.
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Anaesthetic residents used bag valve mask (BVM) or mouth mask (MM) ventilation, both with an O2 flow of 15 l min-1 to ventilate 30 ASA I or II anaesthetised patients for 4 min prior to endotracheal intubation. Mean nasopharyngeal O2 was higher with BVM (BVM 95% (S. D. 3%) MM 54% (S. ⋯ Gastric insufflation was detected in two MM and two BVM patients. This tended to be more severe with MM ventilation. Although MM ventilation has some important disadvantages it can be used effectively by resuscitators with little or no experience in its use.
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Comparative Study
Influence of age on the survival rate of out-of-hospital and in-hospital resuscitation.
During a 9-year period 1472 cardiopulmonary resuscitations were analysed. Five-hundred seventy-two were in-hospital and 898 out-of-hospital resuscitations. Of the out-of-hospital resuscitations 495 (55.1%) patients were less than 70 years and 403 (44.9%) older than 70 years. ⋯ The statistical analysis of the out-of-hospital resuscitations indicates no significant difference in the survival rate of patients younger than 70 years compared to those above 70 years. The survival rate however for patients above 70 years in the in-hospital group was significantly worse, probably attributed to multimorbidity of the older in-hospital patients. The results in our study indicate that old age is not a determinant of prognosis or outcome after CPR.
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Early defibrillation by emergency medical technicians or even less qualified personnel has been shown to improve survival rates for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest caused by ventricular fibrillation. It has been questioned whether these favourable results can be applied within the context of physician-attended emergency medical systems. ⋯ The first 2 years of experience with 499 technician-initiated resuscitation attempts in which the mobile intensive care unit of Klinikum Steglitz was involved, confirmed the results of the pilot study with an improved long-term survival rate (18%) for patients with ventricular fibrillation. We conclude that EMT defibrillation should be introduced in emergency physician-attended two-tiered emergency medical systems, whenever a thorough analysis of the existing rescue systems exhibits a 'relevant frequency' of resuscitation and response interval of 15 min or less.