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What’s New in Resuscitation

VOMA. VOMA. What’s New in Resuscitation. Greg Christiansen DO, MEd, FACOEP VCU Department of Emergency Medicine. Disclosure. No Industry or Third Party Affiliation No Conflict of Interest Credits: Dr. Kevin Ward Dr. Joe Ornato. VOMA. VOMA. Goals.

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What’s New in Resuscitation

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  1. VOMA VOMA What’s New in Resuscitation Greg Christiansen DO, MEd, FACOEP VCU Department of Emergency Medicine

  2. Disclosure • No Industry or Third Party Affiliation • No Conflict of Interest • Credits: Dr. Kevin Ward • Dr. Joe Ornato • VOMA VOMA

  3. Goals • Recognize processes to follow in an emergent cardiac arrest as part of a resuscitation effort • Be familiar with acute resuscitation concepts guiding acute cardiac care

  4. Perceptionsand Reality • Television drama demonstrate 75 % survival rate • Correlates with public perception of CPR success • Adams found 81% of elderly admitted to a hospital believed there was a > 50% chance of their own survival if they had CPR Derrick Adams How mispercetpions among elderly pt regarding survival outcomes…JAOA 106 July 2006 Diem Cardiopulmonary resuscitation on TV: miracles & misinformation NEJM 1996:13 1578-1582.

  5. Myths & Reality • Successful field resuscitation rates • 2-5% • Long held belief… • out of hospital cardiac arrest efforts are futile

  6. Some Myths Die Hard

  7. Flatliners • ..\..\..\Image File\recorded video\video\resuscitation\Flatlinev2.mpg

  8. Question: • Which One of these Organs are Primarily Perfused During Diastole? • Brain • Heart • Kidney • Intestines

  9. Question: • Which One of these Organs are Primarily Perfused During Diastole? • Brain • Heart • Kidney • Intestines

  10. Which Patient has the Highest Chance of ROSC During CPR? • ABP: 120/20, CVP: 20 • ABP: 160/10, CVP: 30 • ABP: 60/30, CVP: 0

  11. Which Patient has the Highest Chance of ROSC During CPR? • ABP: 120/20, CVP: 20 • ABP: 160/10, CVP: 30 • ABP: 60/30, CVP: 0 • CPP = end diastolic atrial pressure – Right atrial pressure ( CVP) • 30 – 0 = 30 CCP

  12. Which Patient has Highest Likelihood of ROSC During CPR? • PetCO2: 6 mmHg: ABP 100/30 • PetCO2: 9 mmHg: ABP 120/20 • PetCO2: 20 mmHg: ABP 70/20

  13. Which Patient has Highest Likelihood of ROSC During CPR? • PetCO2: 6 mmHg: ABP 100/30 • PetCO2: 9 mmHg: ABP 120/20 • PetCO2: 20 mmHg: ABP 70/20 • CPP > 15 tend to have higher ROSC

  14. What effect will Epinephrine or Vasopressin have during CPR? • Lower PetCO2 levels • Increase PetCO2 levels • Increase Cardiac output • Decrease Cardiac Output

  15. What effect will Epinephrine or Vasopressin have during CPR? • Lower PetCO2 levels • Increase PetCO2 levels • Increase Cardiac output • Decrease Cardiac Output • Vasopressors ↑after load, • ↓CO↓CPP ↓ETCO2

  16. Rosamond et al., Heart Disease & Stroke Statistics, 2008 Update. Circulation 2008; 117:e1-e122

  17. Case: MR VeThach – • 46 yo male collapsed on the tread mill • Full arrest • CPR • ALS medication • 10 minute down time

  18. My First Case • Fluid resuscitation • ROSC • Coma • Decorticate Posturing • Sent to CT • Instituted therapeutic hypothermia

  19. Were not making vegetables

  20. Lessons learned What it is & why it works … sometimes

  21. Cardiac Arrest • Final common pathway: Everyone has it once • A symptom or finding of a disease process • Myocardial ischemia, profound hypoxia, conduction defects, toxicologic, hemorrhage, etc • The ultimate state of shock: Global ischemia • Neurologic outcomes better than commonly believed

  22. Goals (when appropriate) • Return of Spontaneous Circulation (ROSC) and reversal of underlying causes. • What is the best therapy for the brain during CPR? Restart the Heart

  23. Methods • Electrical Therapy • Pharmacological Therapy • Mechanical perfusion

  24. Ischemia: The Problem ATP ATP ATP Failure

  25. Myocardial Cell<10% ATP Myocardial Cell30-40% ATP Myocardial Cell100% ATP Importance of Myocardial ATP

  26. Cardiac Image No CPR Courtesy of Dr. Stig Steen University Hospital Lund, Sweden

  27. Cardiac Resus image with CPR

  28. Aod RAd Coronary Perfusion Pressure (CPP) Key to Successful Resuscitation CPP = Aod- RAd

  29. Effect of Chest Compression Pauses on Coronary Perfusion Pressure Aorta CPP RA

  30. The Higher the CPP the Better

  31. Mechanism for Cardiac Compression • Direct Compression of Chambers • Functional Aortic Valve • Trend for higher CPP

  32. Thoracic Pump Mechanism • Global changes in intrathoracic pressure • Heart is passive conduit • Harder to achieve CPP • Maybe better CePP • Beware of Chest tubes

  33. Which Pump? • Not mutually exclusive • Body habitus dependent? • Both markedly deteriorate over time as valves become less functional.

  34. Driving Blindly: • Rule #1: • Palpating Pulses to Monitor CPR Effectiveness ….. • Is for Those Who Don’t Know What to Do.

  35. How to Improve CPP? • Pharmacologically • Vasopressors: Epinephrine vs. Vasopressin • Mechanically • Type of CPR: Regular, new and improved, delux

  36. Effects of Epinephrine

  37. Summary • Many critical components to Successful Resuscitation (Neurological Recovery) • Limiting Total Arrest time is Key!!! • Obtain ROSC ASAP (5-10 minutes) • After ROSC….Real work begins • Similar to Trauma Care…Should be one with Cardiology/Pulmonary Critical Care

  38. Improving Blood Flow during Resuscitation

  39. Quality of Chest Compressionsin OOH-CA Wik et al. JAMA 2005: 293:299-304 • 176 adult patients • Sweden, Norway, England • ROSC 35%

  40. Minimally Interrupted CPR Experience Wisconsin & Arizona: • Emphasis on compression quality and quantity • New protocol • 200 pre shock compression before defibrillation • 200 post shock compression. • Delays endotracheal intubation and eliminates pulse checks. Bobrow, B.J. et.al., Minimally Interrupted Cardiac Resuscitation by Emergency Medical Services for Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. JAMA; 2008; 299: pp 1158-1165.

  41. Minimally Interrupted Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (MICR) by EMSBobrow et al. JAMA 2008; 299:1158-65Peberdy MA, Ornato JP: JAMA 2008; 299:1188-90 • 62 EMS agencies in Arizona • 75% of state population • 200 CCs first • Rhythm check • Single DF • 200 CCs post-DF • Early epinephrine • Delayed intubation

  42. CPR Prior to DefibrillationChristenson J et al. AHA ReSS 2007 • ROC Epistry • N= 7,963 • Male 81% • Byst CPR 51%

  43. Compression Rate vs. ROSCAbella BS. Circulation 2005; 111:428-34

  44. Critical pressure for ROSC (Paradis, JAMA 1990;263:3257-8) % Chest Wall Decompression % Chest Wall Decompression Effect of Incomplete Chest Decompression On Coronary and Cerebral Perfusion PressuresYannopoulos D et al. Resuscitation 2005;64:363-72 ǂ • n=9 instrumented swine • 6 minutes untreated VF  standard CPR* x 3 min  CPR with 75% recoil (residual 1.2 cm sternal compression @ end decompression) x 1 min  standard CPR* x 1 min  defib x 3  ACLS

  45. 156 OOH cardiac arrest • 868 DF attempts 60% "Hands-off Interval" [sec] from Stop CPR to DF shock 0 5 10 15 20 40% % ROSC 20% 0% High Medium Low Median Frequency (VF “Coarseness”) “Hands-Off” Interval vs. DF SuccessEftestol T et al. Circulation 2002; 105:2270-3

  46. CPR Fraction prior to DFChristenson J et al. AHA ReSS 2007 • ROC Epistry • N= 7,963 • Male 81% • Byst CPR 51%

  47. Improving Blood Flow During Resuscitation Summary • CPR necessary to provide coronary perfusion • Must restart the heart for survival • Conclusion – focus of the heart! What’s the evidence to support this focus?

  48. Therapeutic hypothermia during or immediately after resuscitation

  49. Today • 500 of 5,000 hospitals use therapeutic hypothermia • Capturing on 20% of all eligible patients If the patient can’t walk out of the hospital then… A hospital bed is a parked taxi with the meter running - Groucho Marx

  50. BRAIN INJURYis the most common cause of death after initial resuscitation from sudden cardiac arrest HIPPA

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