EFFECT OF ARREST TIME ON THE HEMODYNAMIC EFFICACY OF PRECORDIAL COMPRESSION

Citation
C. Duggal et al., EFFECT OF ARREST TIME ON THE HEMODYNAMIC EFFICACY OF PRECORDIAL COMPRESSION, Critical care medicine, 23(7), 1995, pp. 1233-1236
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Emergency Medicine & Critical Care
Journal title
ISSN journal
00903493
Volume
23
Issue
7
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1233 - 1236
Database
ISI
SICI code
0090-3493(1995)23:7<1233:EOATOT>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the efficacy of conventional threshold levels of coronary perfusion pressure and end-tidal CO, as predictors of resu scitability after prolonged cardiac arrest, Design: Prospective, rando mized, controlled animal study, Setting: University research laborator y, Subjects: Twenty-one Sprague-Dawley rats, including three groups of seven animals in each group, Interventions: Ventricular fibrillation was untreated for 9, 12, or 15 mins, After an additional 5-min interva l of precordial compression, external direct current defibrillation wa s attempted, Measurements and Main Results: All animals were successfu lly resuscitated after 9 mins of ventricular fibrillation but less tha n one half of the animals were successfully resuscitated after 15 mins of ventricular fibrillation, Each of seven animals survived for 24 hr s after 9 mins of untreated ventricular fibrillation but none of the a nimals survived after 15 mins of ventricular fibrillation, In this exp erimental setting, neither coronary perfusion pressure nor end-tidal C O2 produced by precordial compression was predictive of outcomes when the animals underwent progressively longer intervals of untreated card iac arrest, Conclusions: The efficacy of precordial compression-as mea sured by coronary perfusion pressure and end-tidal CO2 concentration a fter prolongation of untreated cardiac arrest-was not overtly compromi sed, However, the previously established critical threshold levels of coronary perfusion pressure and end-tidal CO2 failed as predictors of resuscitability after prolonged intervals of untreated cardiac arrest.