Articles: cardiac-arrest.
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Scand J Trauma Resus · Jan 2008
The early minutes of in-hospital cardiac arrest: shock or CPR? A population based prospective study.
In the early minutes of cardiac arrest, timing of defibrillation and cardiopulmonary resuscitation during the basic life support phase (BLS CPR) is debated. Aims of this study were to provide in-hospital incidence and outcome data, and to investigate the relation between outcome and time from collapse to defibrillation, time to BLS CPR, and CPR quality. ⋯ Our findings indicate that defibrillation should have priority during the first 3 minutes of VF/VT. Later, patients benefit from CPR in conjunction with defibrillation. Patients presenting with non-shockable rhythms have a grave prognosis, and the outcome was not associated with time to BLS or CPR quality.
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The decision to terminate resuscitative measures in the setting of cardiac arrest is based on several criteria, some of which are subjective. Ultrasound in the emergency department has potentially added an objective data point to assist in this decision. ⋯ Most emergency physicians in this cohort who have access to ultrasound use it in cardiac arrest cases and believe that it shortens code times.
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Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg · Aug 2006
Continuous retrograde blood cardioplegia ensures prolonged aortic cross-clamping time without increasing the operative risk.
The aim of this study was to assess whether the continuous retrograde blood cardioplegia ensures prolonged aortic cross-clamping time without increasing the operative risk. From 1996 to 2003, 204 consecutive patients who had cardiac procedure requiring aortic cross-clamping time > or = 150 min, were prospectively included in this study: low risk group (EuroSCORE < or = 2) 50 patients, medium risk group (EuroSCORE 3-5) 68 patients, high risk group (EuroSCORE > or = 6) 86 patients. The myocardial protection associated induction of cardiac arrest by antegrade injection of hyperkalemic warm blood, continuous retrograde intermediate lukewarm (20 degrees C) blood cardioplegia, retrograde warm blood reperfusion and systemic normothermia. ⋯ The mean predicted mortality of the population studied (EuroSCORE logistic method) was 8.4%+/-12 (range 0.87%-76.15%) with a 95% confidence interval of 6.7% to 10%. The observed mortality was not different from the predicted mortality. Continuous retrograde intermediate lukewarm blood cardioplegia associated with systemic normothermia allows prolonged aortic clamping time for complex intervention without increase of operative mortality and morbidity.
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Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is common and patients who are initially resuscitated by ambulance officers and transported to hospital are usually admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). In the past, the treatment in the ICU consisted of supportive care only, and most patients remained unconscious due to the severe anoxic neurological injury. It was this neurological injury rather than cardiac complications that caused the high rate of morbidity and mortality. ⋯ The benefit of hypothermia in non-ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest remains uncertain. Also, the best timing of induction and the duration of hypothermia after cardiac arrest are uncertain. Clinical trials are currently underway to assess these issues.