Cardiocerebral
Resuscitation
The New
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Gordon
A. Ewy, MD
From
the University of Arizona Sarver Heart Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, Ariz.
Correspondence
to Gordon A. Ewy, MD, Professor and Chief, Cardiology, Director, University of
Arizona Sarver Heart Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85724. E-mail gaewy@aol.com
Received August 4, 2004; revision received November 24, 2004; accepted December 10, 2004.
Key Words: cardiopulmonary
resuscitation • defibrillation • fibrillation • perfusion • cardiac arrest
|
Introduction
|
"Why
is it that every time I press on his chest he opens his eyes, and
every time I stop to breathe for him he goes back to sleep?"1
This article
reviews research that shows that cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
as it has been practiced and as it is presently taught and advocated
is far from optimal. The International Guidelines 2000 for
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care,
hereafter referred to as "Guidelines 2000," were evidence
based.2
During their formulation, the greatest weight of evidence was given
to placebo-controlled randomized trials in humans. Unfortunately, it
is extremely difficult not only to obtain informed consent but also
to obtain funding for studies of the magnitude necessary to answer
critically important CPR questions. It is unfortunate that
controlled CPR research in animals was given the lowest priority in
the evidence-based scheme.2
In our opinion, controlled animal experiments provide data that may
be nearly impossible to obtain in human trials in which the
circumstance, age, disease states, interventions, and response times
to arrest are variable and often unknown. On the other hand, the use
of swine for CPR research is not the perfect experimental solution,
because they are easier to resuscitate in that they have no
underlying heart disease (unless experimentally produced), they are
younger, and they have more compliant chests than older adults with
cardiac arrest.
Since the
formulation of "Guidelines 2000," old and new research in
animals and new research in humans have rendered them outdated. Although
they will be revised, it is unknown when and what changes will be
made. Nevertheless, in 2003, the CPR research information from both
animal and humans was so compelling that we could not in good
conscience wait for yet another set of new guidelines. Accordingly,
our CPR research group, in cooperation with the Tucson Fire
Department, initiated a new comprehensive resuscitation program in
November 2003 in Tucson, Ariz, with emphasis on these new research
findings.3
We were encouraged in this effort by our colleagues in Europe,4
and, as noted below, recent studies in humans have reinforced our
conclusions.
|
Three Phases of Cardiac Arrest Due to
Ventricular Fibrillation
|
One of the many important concepts to come forward since "Guidelines 2000"
were published is the 3-phase, time-dependent concept of cardiac
arrest due to ventricular fibrillation articulated by Weisfelt and
Becker.5
The first phase is the electrical phase, which lasts 5
minutes. During this phase, the most important intervention is
prompt defibrillation. This is why the benefit of the automatic
external defibrillator (AED) has been shown in a wide variety of
settings, including airplanes, airports, casinos, and in the
community.6–10
The second phase of cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation
is the hemodynamic phase, which lasts for a variable period of time,
but possibly from minute 5 to minute 15 of the arrest. During this
time, generation of adequate cerebral and coronary perfusion
pressure is critical to neurologically normal survival; however, if
an AED is the first intervention applied during this phase,
the subject is much less likely to survive for reasons that will
be presented below. The third phase is the metabolic phase, for
which innovative new concepts are needed, the most promising of
which is the application of hypothermia. An appreciation of these 3
phases helps one put into context some of the recent findings in
resuscitation research.
Physiology
of Resuscitation From Cardiac Arrest
The opening quote above is from a woman who had been given 9-1-1 dispatch
telephone instructions in cardiopulmonary resuscitation.1
It is more than a decade old, but when I listened to this recording,
I could not help but marvel at the importance of the observation made
by this distraught woman trying to resuscitate her husband while
awaiting the arrival of the paramedics. She correctly observed what
our and others’ research had found: that during cardiac arrest,
maintenance of cerebral perfusion is critical to neurological
function. During the hemodynamic phase, the most important
determinant of cerebral perfusion is the arterial pressure generated
during external chest compressions.11–15
This perfusion pressure is lost when one stops chest compressions for
rescue breathing.11–15
The same can be said for maintaining viability of the fibrillating
heart. The fibrillating ventricle can be maintained for long periods
of time if there is adequate coronary or myocardial perfusion
pressure produced and the coronary arteries are open. If early
defibrillation is not available, a major determinant of survival
from ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest is the production of
adequate coronary perfusion pressure.11–15
The coronary perfusion pressure is the difference between the aortic
"diastolic" pressure and the right atrial "diastolic"
pressure. The word diastolic is in quotes because CPR
"systole" is the chest compression phase, and CPR "diastolic"
is the release phase of external chest compression (Figure
1). As shown in Figure
1, once chest compressions are begun, it takes time to develop
cerebral and coronary perfusion pressures. When chest compression is
interrupted for rescue breathing, the cerebral perfusion pressure
drops abruptly, and the cardiac perfusion pressure drops
significantly. During single-rescuer scenarios, it takes time for
the cerebral and coronary perfusion pressures to increase with chest
compressions, only to fall each time they are interrupted for
ventilation.16
View larger version
(28K):
[in
this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1. Simultaneous
recording of aortic and right atrial pressures during first 15 external
chest compressions in swine in cardiac arrest due to ventricular
fibrillation. AoS indicates aortic "systolic" pressure during
chest compression; AoD, aortic "diastolic" pressure during
release phase; and RAD, right atrial pressure during
"diastolic" or release phase of chest compression.
|
|
These perfusion
pressures are important. It has been shown that during prolonged
cardiac arrest, survival in animals (Figure
2) and return of spontaneous circulation in humans are related
to the coronary perfusion pressures generated during chest compression.15,17
There are several other major determinants of the perfusion pressure
during closed-chest compression in cardiac arrest, including
vascular resistance, vascular volume, and intrathoracic pressure.
The importance of the vascular resistance during chest compression
explains why vasopressors may improve perfusion pressures and
vasodilators decrease perfusion pressures.18–21
The effective intravascular volume is also critical, because an
adequate perfusion pressure cannot be obtained and patients cannot
be resuscitated if the vascular volume is low. Causes of low
vascular volume include excessive blood loss and vascular fluid
extravasation. Marked dilation of the venous system may also result
in an effective low blood volume. The intrathoracic pressure is yet
another determinant of perfusion pressure. A low or negative
intrathoracic pressure during the "diastolic" or release
phase of chest compression helps to augment venous return into the
chest.22
A high intrathoracic pressure during the relaxation or "diastolic"
phase of chest compression inhibits venous return. Thus excessive
ventilation, as will be detailed below, will decrease venous return
to the thorax and decrease survival.23
View larger version
(22K):
[in
this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2. Survival from
prolonged cardiac arrest in canines relates to coronary perfusion pressure
generated during external chest compressions. See text.
|
|
However, there is
a distinct window of time in which the perfusion pressure must be
restored. Excellent perfusion pressures supplied too late (after the
hemodynamic phase and during the metabolic phase) will not
resuscitate the subject because irreversible tissue and organ damage
has occurred.14
An appreciation of the physiology of closed-chest resuscitation from
cardiac arrest facilitates understanding of the research findings to
be presented below.
Lack of
Bystander-Initiated CPR
The first problem contributing to the dismal survival rates of
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is the lack of bystander- or
citizen-initiated basic CPR. Although the majority of out-of-hospital cardiac
arrests are witnessed, only 1 in 5 receive bystander- or
citizen-initiated CPR.24–26
A survey by our CPR Research Group indicated that only 15% of lay
individuals would definitely do mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on a
stranger.27
Anonymous surveys have shown that lay individuals are not the only
ones reluctant to provide mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on
strangers—so are certified CPR instructors and physicians.28–31
Yet, in the absence of early defibrillation, bystander- or
citizen-initiated chest compression is essential for improved
survival for patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.32
A meta-analysis published in 1991 of 17 studies showed that
individuals receiving bystander CPR were 4.5 times more likely to
survive.33
Since then, other studies confirmed the importance of
bystander-initiated CPR for out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest
victims.24
In another study, those who received bystander-initiated CPR were 3
times more likely to survive to leave the hospital.25
And a recent report from a 20-community study of adult
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest found that citizen-initiated CPR was
strongly associated with increased survival and better quality of
life.26
Yet, early bystander CPR is not being done, principally because of
the bystander’s reluctance to perform mouth-to-mouth rescue breathing.
This information, along with our research findings, led us to ask
whether chest-compression–only CPR, eg, without mouth-to-mouth
rescue breathing, was better for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest than
doing nothing until the paramedics arrived.
We compared
24-hour survival with 3 different approaches to bystander CPR using
a swine model of prehospital single-rescuer CPR. The 3 interventions
were chest-compression–only CPR, "ideal" standard CPR, and
no bystander CPR.1
The ideal standard CPR group was ventilated with hand-bag-valve
ventilation via an endotracheal tube with 17% oxygen and 4% carbon
dioxide, with 2 ventilations delivered within 4 seconds before each
set of 15 chest compressions, to simulate "ideal"
mouth-to-mouth rescue breathing. After one-half minute of untreated
ventricular fibrillation, the swine were randomized. After 12
minutes of intervention (total duration of ventricular fibrillation
12.5 minutes), advanced cardiac life support was supplied,
simulating the late arrival of paramedics. We found that all animals
in both the chest-compression–only CPR (Figure
3) and the ideal standard CPR (Figure
4) groups were resuscitated successfully and were neurologically
normal at 24 hours. In sharp contrast, only 2 of 8 animals in the
group that had no chest compressions until 12.5 minutes (simulating
no bystander CPR and the late arrival of emergency medical
personnel) survived, and 1 of the 2 was comatose and unresponsive.1
Our University of Arizona Sarver Heart Center CPR Research Group has
published 6 studies with a total of 169 swine with variable
durations of ventricular fibrillation arrest before initiation of
basic life support (BLS), and
various durations of "ideal" standard BLS and chest-compression–only BLS.1,14,34–38
We found that chest-compression–only BLS and ideal standard BLS resulted
in similar 24- or 48-hour normal or near-normal neurological
survival and that both were dramatically better than simulated
no-bystander–initiated BLS and late arrival of paramedics (Figure
5).1,14,34–38
Others have confirmed these findings.39
View larger version
(57K):
[in
this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3. Simultaneous
recording of aortic and right atrial pressures during continuous external
chest compressions in swine in cardiac arrest due to ventricular
fibrillation. AoS indicates aortic "systolic" pressure during
chest compression; AoD, aortic "diastolic" pressure during
release phase; and RAD, right atrial pressure during
"diastolic" or release phase of chest compression.
|
|
View larger version
(80K):
[in
this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4. Simultaneous
recording of aortic diastolic (red) and right atrial (yellow) pressures
during CPR in which 2 ventilations are delivered within 4-second time
period.
|
|
View larger version
(20K):
[in
this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5. Survival from
simulated out-of-hospital cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation
during single lay rescuer scenario. Results from 6 different studies are
summarized (see text). Survival was the same with chest-compression-only
CPR (CCC-CPR) and so-called ideal standard CPR, in which
2 breaths were delivered in 4 seconds (Ideal-CPR), and either was
dramatically better than when no bystander CPR was initiated.
|
|
These findings
were enough for us to encourage bystander continuous-compression CPR
without mouth-to-mouth rescue breathing for witnessed cardiac arrest
in adults, eg, nonrespiratory cardiac arrests; however, "Guidelines
2000" did not make this recommendation. Although not previously
willing to extend such a recommendation for everyone doing
bystander-initiated CPR, American Heart Association guidelines have
stated that, "If a person is unwilling to perform mouth-to-mouth ventilation,
he or she should rapidly attempt resuscitation, omitting
mouth-to-mouth ventilation."40,41
Unfortunately in American Heart Association– and Red Cross–sponsored
CPR courses, chest-compression–only CPR is rarely, if ever,
mentioned.
After publication
of "Guidelines 2000," a pivotal finding was reported from England.42
Dr Karl Kern, a member of our CPR research group, was a coauthor of
this study.42
Videos of lay individuals doing CPR on manikins documented that it
takes them an average of 16±1 seconds to deliver the "Guidelines
2000"–recommended 2 breaths.42
Accordingly, we conducted another experiment in swine in which
continuous-chest–compression BLS was
compared with standard BLS, in which we took 16 seconds to deliver the 2 breaths before
each set of 15 compressions (Figure
6).35
As recommended, each breath was delivered over an 2-second
interval. After 3 minutes of untreated ventricular fibrillation, 12
minutes of BLS was initiated. Defibrillation was attempted at 15
minutes of cardiac arrest. Neurologically normal 24-hour survival
was dramatically better with continuous-chest–compression CPR
(CCC-CPR) versus BLS CPR the way it is actually done by lay individuals, that is,
when 16 seconds is needed to deliver 2 rescue breaths before each
set of 15 chest compressions. Continuous-chest–compression survival
was 12 (80%) of 15 versus 2 (13%) of 15 for standard CPR.35
In Figure
7, survival with CCC-CPR is shown as 73% rather than 80%
because 73% is the average survival of the CCC-CPR groups in our 6 previously published studies involving
169 animal studies. The survival rate of 13% in our experimental
model of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest was of intense interest
because in Tucson,
the average survival for individuals with out-of-hospital cardiac
arrest due to ventricular fibrillation over the past decade was 13%.22
View larger version
(76K):
[in
this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6. Simultaneous
recording of aortic (blue) and right atrial (yellow) pressures during
simulated single lay rescuer scenario in which each 2 ventilations are
delivered within 16 seconds. ECG (bottom yellow) shows continuous
ventricular fibrillation. Note that 15 chest compressions take less time
than 2 ventilations (see text).
|
|
View larger version
(22K):
[in
this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7. Comparison of
24-hour neurologically normal survival (percent) during simulated single
lay rescuer scenario of out-of-hospital ventricular fibrillation cardiac
arrest. CCC-CPR is continuous-chest-compression CPR without
ventilation; Standard CPR is when each set of 15 chest compressions was
interrupted for 16 seconds to deliver 2 ventilations.
|
|
We wondered
whether a younger population of highly motivated individuals, eg,
our medical students, could deliver the recommend 2 breaths any
faster. In a study using manikins, we found that it took medical
students an average of 14±1 seconds to perform the 2 recommended
breaths for rescue breathing.43
We then recorded paramedics’ performance and found that it took
them an average of 10±1 seconds.44
Thus, it takes a considerable amount of time for the 2 respirations
that are to be given before each set of 15 chest compressions. This
markedly limits the number of chest compressions being delivered.
Experimental and
human data support the need for >80 compressions per minute to
achieve optimal blood flow during CPR.45–47
In addition, our studies have shown that compression rates of 100
to 120 per minute are better than 80 per minute and that the use of
a metronome to ensure an appropriate chest compression rate improves
perfusion in humans.46,47
The guidelines for adult BLS were changed in the mid 1990s and recommended that a single rescuer
deliver 2 ventilations before each set of 15 chest compressions. The
revised recommended compression rate of 100 per minute was intended
to increase the total number of delivered compressions to 64 per
minute, with the assumption that the pause for the 2 ventilations
takes 4 seconds2;
however, as noted above, this appears to be physically impossible.
Another
observation is that if a subject collapses with ventricular fibrillation,
gasping lasts from 2
to 4 minutes. Gasping is both fortunate and unfortunate. It is
fortunate because when chest compression is initiated promptly, the
subject is likely to continue to gasp and provide self-ventilation.
In fact, Kouwenhoven et al, in one of their early programs,
indicated that ventilation was not necessary during chest
compression as the subject gasped (W.B. Kouwenhoven, J.R. Jude, and
G.B. Knickerbocker, demonstration of the technique of CPR for New
York Society of Anesthesiologist 1960s; copy of demonstration
provided on CD by J.R. Jude). However, gasping may be unfortunate,
because most lay individuals interpret this as an indication that
the individual is still breathing and do not initiate bystander CPR
or call 9-1-1 as soon as they
should. Our survey indicated that chest-compression–only CPR,
or CCC-CPR, is more likely to be initiated by bystanders,
and our research demonstrates that during the first 15 minutes of
cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation, CCC-CPR is dramatically better than standard CPR, because
ventilation takes so long that the chest is being compressed less
than half of the time.27,35
On the basis of
the above data, one aspect of our Sarver Heart Center/Tucson Fire
Department Initiative for Excellence in CPR is our "Be A
Lifesaver" program for the public.22
This program encourages citizens to call 9-1-1 and then initiate
continuous chest compression without mouth-to-mouth ventilation for
out-of-hospital witnessed unexpected sudden collapse in adults until
the paramedics/firefighters arrive. The purpose of this initiative
is to dramatically increase the incidence of bystander- or
citizen-initiated CPR.
The 3 steps of
our Be A Lifesaver program are presented in the Table.
Another major advantage of this program is that individuals can be
taught CCC-CPR in a relatively short period of time. A
demonstration can be seen by accessing the Sarver Heart Center World
Wide Web site at www.arizona.heart.edu. Our Be A Lifesaver program
also recognizes the importance of the use of AEDs early in witnessed
unexpected sudden collapse in adults (Table).
It is of
historical interest that physicians in the Netherlands were the
first to recognize that if an adult develops ventricular fibrillation
and suddenly collapses, his or her lungs, pulmonary veins, left
heart, aorta, and all of the arteries are full of oxygenated blood.48
They suggested that the mnemonic for cardiac arrest should not be
ABC, for airway, breathing, and circulation, but CBA, for chest compression first, breathing, and then attention to
airway if there was a problem with breathing.48
Our
recommendations are for witnessed unexpected sudden collapse in an
adult, a condition that is almost always due to cardiac arrest. In
contrast, in patients with respiratory arrest, ventilation is
critically important. Chest compressions plus mouth-to-mouth rescue
breathing is markedly superior to either technique alone.48
Nevertheless, studies of asphyxial cardiac arrest in swine have shown
that chest compression is better, but only slightly better, than
doing nothing.49
CCC-CPR Supported by Observations in Humans
Since our Tucson program was initiated, physicians from Tokyo, Japan,
reported on their observational study of 7138 patients with
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.50
They found that chest-compression–only CPR was the best independent
predictor of their primary end point of neurologically normal
hospital discharge, with an adjusted OR of 2.5 (P=0.002).50
Dispatch-Directed
CCC-CPR
After "Guidelines 2000" were published, Hallstrom and associates51
from Seattle, Wash, published a 6-year study involving 520 patients who
were randomized to telephone dispatch–directed standard CPR or CPR
with chest compression but without mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
They found that survival was 10.4% with standard CPR and 14.6% with
chest-compression–only CPR.51
Accordingly, as part of our overall program, the first change in the
Tucson Fire Department Emergency Medical Service system was to have
telephone dispatchers provide instructions for chest-compression–only
CPR.
Present
Guidelines for Paramedics Are Also Not Optimal
The Ontario Prehospital Advanced Life Support (OPALS) study tested
the incremental effect on survival after out-of-hospital cardiac
arrest of the addition of a program of advanced life support to a
program of bystander BLS and encouraged use of AEDs.26
They found that the addition of advanced life support intervention,
as currently practiced, did not improve the rate of survival after
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in a previously optimized emergency
medical service system of rapid defibrillation.26
Does this mean we can do away with our expensive paramedic systems, or
does this mean that the present approach and guidelines for the
paramedics are also not optimal? We think the "Guidelines 2000"
for the paramedics are also not optimal.
Chest
Compressions Are Necessary Before Defibrillation During the Hemodynamic Phase
of Cardiac Arrest
Cobb and associates52
noted that as more of their paramedic/firefighter units were
supplied with AEDs, the survival rate appeared to decline.
Therefore, they changed their protocol so that the units performed
90 seconds of chest compression before applying the AED. They found that when this was done, survival improved.52
This information was known at the time of the writing of "Guidelines
2000," but because this change in the Seattle protocols was made
while another study was being done, this finding was not incorporated
into the guidelines. Professor L. Wik, from Oslo, Norway, noted this
controversy and studied this question.53
In a randomized trial of 200 patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest,
paramedics performed either 3 minutes of chest compression before
defibrillation or defibrillated first.53
They found that when the ambulance arrived in fewer than 5 minutes
(during the electrical phase of cardiac arrest), there was no
difference in outcome; however, when the ambulance arrived after 5
minutes (during the hemodynamic phase of cardiac arrest), there was
a dramatic difference. In this group, the 1-year survival rate was
4% in the shock-first group and 20% in the chest-compression–first group.53
A detailed analysis of the Seattle data revealed similar results.53
In the group who were attended to within 4 minutes, there was no
difference in survival to hospital discharge (31% for chest
compression first and 32% for defibrillation first); however, in
patients treated after 4 minutes, survival was greater (27%) in the
group with 90 seconds of chest compression first than in the group
who received AED shock first (17% survival).54
In Tucson, the
average arrival time of paramedic/firefighters is 7
minutes, that is, in the hemodynamic phase of cardiac arrest. Accordingly,
Tucson paramedic/firefighters have been instructed to give 200 chest
compressions before defibrillation. We decided on 200 compressions
at 100 compressions per minute because it was between the 90 seconds
in the study by Cobb et al52
and the 3 minutes used by Wik et al.53
Two hundred chest compressions should take 2
minutes to perform and do not require the paramedics/firefighters to
time the duration of the chest compressions, only to count them.
Limiting
Interruptions of Chest Compressions by Paramedics/Firefighters
Associates from our CPR research group have documented that paramedics/firefighters
are compressing the chest of the victim less than half of the time
they are at the scene (Terry Valenzuela, MD, written communication,
December 14, 2004). This lack of compressions appeared to be the
result of the paramedics following guidelines and using AEDs. This
was an astounding finding. Accordingly, the first change that was
made in our paramedic program was to ensure that 1
paramedic/firefighter is compressing the chest continuously, with
only short interruptions for defibrillation shock and rhythm
analysis. Intubation is delayed until 3 series of 200 chest
compressions, shock, 200 postshock chest compressions, and rhythm
analysis are performed. Emphasis is placed on obtaining intravenous
access. Intubation is delayed until after 3 series of compressions
and defibrillations.
Support for
delaying intubation and using a bag-valve-mask for ventilation is
supported by the study of Gausche and associates.54
Their controlled clinical trial of patients aged 12 years and younger
or weighing an estimated 40 kg or less showed no significant difference
in survival between the bag-valve-mask group (30%) and the
endotracheal intubation group (26%).54
This important finding (that endotracheal intubation was not
superior to bag-valve-mask ventilation even in the pediatric age
group, a group in whom respiratory arrest is expected to be more
common) supports the fact that endotracheal intubation, although
commonly performed and commonly thought to be of the highest
priority, is not critically important and is probably deleterious
because it results in interruptions of chest compression.
Avoiding
the Immediate Deployment of AEDs During the Hemodynamic Phase of Cardiac Arrest
Most AEDs available during and before 2003 took a significant amount
of time to analyze the patient’s rhythm, to recommend defibrillation
shock, and then to analyze the postshock rhythm, such that minutes
were added to the arrest time, which makes resuscitation less
likely.55,56
Accordingly, the immediate deployment of an AED by paramedics/firefighters arriving during the hemodynamic phase
of cardiac arrest may decrease the chances of survival from
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.56,57
These devices result in prolonged interruption of precordial
compression during the hemodynamic phase of cardiac arrest and
contribute to poor survival.57
The Tucson paramedics/firefighters are instructed to use the "quick
look" features of defibrillators if available.
Two
Hundred Chest Compressions by Paramedics/Firefighters After Shock and Before
Rhythm Analysis
As noted above, paramedics/firefighters are instructed to perform another
200 chest compressions after the shock before assessing the rhythm.
This is based on the fact that after prolonged ventricular fibrillation,
the shock frequently defibrillates, but to a nonperfusing rhythm. In
fact, to produce pulseless electrical activity (PEA) in the
experimental laboratory, one fibrillates the animal, does no chest
compression for several minutes, then defibrillates, and the result
is usually PEA, or the older term, "electrical mechanical
dissociation" or "EMD."58,59
If chest compression is applied and the heart is perfused after the
defibrillating shock, the PEA is more likely to revert to a
perfusing rhythm.59
If the
paramedics/firefighters witness the arrest, they defibrillate first.
Otherwise, they assume that the patient is in the hemodynamic phase
of cardiac arrest and perform 200 chest compressions, deliver the
shock, and immediately perform another 200 chest compressions before
rhythm analysis. As noted above, this sequence is followed 3 times
before an attempt to intubate. Before intubation, the patient is
ventilated via bag-valve-mask.
Excessive
Ventilation Avoided
Some time after advocating chest-compression-only CPR, we changed the
designation to "continuous-chest-compression CPR." Our original thought
was "ventilate all you want, just do not stop pressing on the
chest." We now know that "ventilate all you want" is wrong
as well. Excessive ventilation is a major problem in CPR, decreasing
the chances of survival.21
After the
recommended chest compression rate was increased from 60
compressions per minute to 80 to 100 compressions per minute, we had
our CPR research nurse attend a number of cardiac arrests in the
hospital to count the number of chest compressions per minute that
physicians were providing. The nurse also counted the number of
ventilations per minute.60
The number of ventilations was consistently more than the
recommended 12 to 15 per minute.2
Some were ventilated at a faster rate than the chest was being compressed!
The average number of ventilations was 37 per minute.60
This number became of increased interest when Aufderheide and associates23
recently reported the same average number of excessive number of
ventilations by paramedics. They then studied the effect of
ventilation rate on survival in a swine model of cardiac arrest and
found that excessive ventilations decreased survival.23
With simultaneous chest compressions and ventilations, there is
a dramatic increase in intrathoracic pressure, decreasing venous
return, and thus perfusion pressures. The study by Aufderheide and
associates23
indicates that 12 to 15 ventilations per minute are much better than
the near 30 ventilations per minute that are often delivered.
There is a need
for more research into the best way for ventilation to be delivered
in the various phases of cardiac arrest, depending on whether rescue
breathing was performed or not. The amount and type of ventilation
studied by different groups are variable, and the results have been
conflicting.61,62
Is there a role for negative pressure during ventilation, as
proposed and studied by Lurie and associates22,61?
Wik and associates53
found that optimal paramedic ventilation is 10 mL/kg at a frequency
of 12 ventilations per minute. Is this what one should recommend?
This is another area that needs more study.
Just as
multicenter clinical trials are necessary to provide large enough
numbers from a variety of locations to ensure their validity, we
think there is a need for multicenter laboratory research using
common protocols to give better direction and preliminary
preclinical data to support the pursuit of expensive multicenter
clinical trials. Standards and guidelines for CPR have been
advocated for more than 40 years, and we still only have some of the
answers.
The
Metabolic Phase: Hypothermia
It has long been appreciated that survival from drowning is more
likely with cold water rather than warm. Although improved neurological
recovery was reported by Benson et al63
in 1959 in a small number of comatose patients after resuscitation
from cardiac arrest treated with hypothermia, it was not until the
simultaneous reports from Austria and Australia of improved survival
and neurological outcome that this concept was more generally
accepted.64,65
After the publication
of these studies, the International Liaison Committee on
Resuscitation (ILCOR) issued a new statement on hypothermia.66
It states, "Unconscious adults with spontaneous out-of-hospital
cardiac arrest and an initial rhythm of ventricular fibrillation
should be cooled to 32 to 34 degrees centigrade for 12 to 24
hours."66
They added that, "Such cooling also may be beneficial for other
rhythms or for in-hospital cardiac arrest."66
More research is needed to define the best and safest methods for
postresuscitation hypothermia.
|
Conclusions
|
This article reviewed the studies that led us to institute a new
system of CPR for out-of-hospital witnessed arrest due to ventricular
fibrillation in adults.3
It is called cardiocerebral resuscitation (CCR), or continuous-chest–compression CPR (CCC-CPR) for witnessed unexpected sudden cardiac arrest in adults,
to differentiate it from the presently taught CPR that may be better
(but we do not think ideal) for patients with respiratory arrest.
Sudden witnessed collapse in an adult is most often due to
ventricular fibrillation, and the present CPR as articulated by
"Guidelines 2000" results in excessive interruptions of
chest compressions for other presently mandated tasks.2
These excessive interruptions are lethal.
Some of the major
unanswered questions are as follows: When is ventilation mandatory
during prolonged cardiocerebral resuscitation? Ventilation is
probably mandatory after 15
minutes of chest compression only in patients who are not gasping.
This needs to be studied.
If one is willing
to do mouth-to-mouth rescue breathing for witnessed cardiac arrest,
what is the best compression-to-ventilation ratio? One of our
studies suggests that it might be continuous chest compressions for
the first 4 minutes, follow by 1 or 2 ventilations before each set
of 100 compressions.67
If bystanders
perform chest-compression–only CPR and the paramedics arrive within
8 to 15 minutes, what is the best sequence of ventilation for the
paramedics/firefighters? Clearly, excessive ventilation is to be
avoided, but are the recommended 12 to 15 ventilations per minute
optimal? Should fewer ventilations and the use of the impedance
valve mask be used? Continued research in cardiocerebral
resuscitation is clearly needed, but we cannot wait for all the
answers, nor until the next guidelines are published, to make some
needed changes.
|
Acknowledgments
|
This article was requested after this topic was presented at Cardiology
Grand Rounds at Massachusetts General Hospital on June 8, 2004. The
information presented is from the research of the University of
Arizona Sarver Heart Center CPR Research Group. The permanent
members consist of University of Arizona faculty from a variety of
specialties: Karl B. Kern, MD (cardiologist), Arthur B. Sanders, MD
(emergency medicine), Charles W. Otto, MD (anesthesiology), Robert
A. Berg, MD (pediatrics), Ron W. Hilwig, PhD, DVM, Melinda M. Hayes,
MD (anesthesiology), Mark Berg, MD (pediatrics), and Gordon A. Ewy,
MD (cardiologist); members of the Tucson Fire Department: Dan
Newburn (Fire Chief), Terry Valenzuela, MD (medical director), and
Lani L. Clark (research associate); and Pila Martinez (public
education) from the Sarver Heart Center, Public Affairs.
Disclosure
Dr Ewy has been
designated as a "CPR Giant" of the American Heart
Association for his contribution in defibrillation and CPR; however,
the opinions expressed in this article are those of Dr Ewy and of
the University of Arizona Sarver Heart Center CPR Group and are not
necessarily those of the American Heart Association.
|
References
|
- Berg RA, Kern KB,
Sanders AB, Otto CW, Hilwig RW, Ewy GA. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation:
bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation: is ventilation necessary? Circulation.
1993; 88: 1907–1915.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- American Heart Association, in collaboration
with the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation. Guidelines for
cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care:
international consensus on science. Circulation. 2000: 102 (suppl
I): I-1–I-403.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Ewy GA. A new approach for out-of-hospital CPR:
a bold step forward. Resuscitation. 2003; 58: 271–272.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Chamberlain D, Handley AJ, Colquhoun M. Time for
change? Resuscitation. 2003; 58: 237–247.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Weisfeldt ML, Becker LB. Resuscitation after
cardiac arrest: a 3-phase time-sensitive model. JAMA. 2002; 288:
3035–3038.[Free Full Text]
- O’Rourke MF, Donaldson E, Geddes JS. An airline
cardiac arrest program. Circulation. 1997; 96: 2849–2853.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Page RL, Joglar JA, Kowal RC, Zagrodzky JD,
Nelson LL, Ramaswamy K, Barbera SJ, Hamdan MH, McKenas DK. Use of
automatic external defibrillators by a U.S. airline. N Engl J Med. 2000;
343: 1210–1216.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Caffrey SL, Willoughby PJ, Pepe PE, Becker LB.
Public use of automatic external defibrillators. N Engl J Med. 2002;
347: 1242–1247.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Valenzuela TD, Roe DJ, Nichol G, Clark LL,
Spaite DW, Hardman RG. Outcomes of rapid defibrillation by security
officers after cardiac arrest in casinos. N Engl J Med. 2000; 343:
1206–1209.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- The Public Access Defibrillation Trial
Investigators. Public-access defibrillation and survival after
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. N Engl J Med. 2004; 351: 637–646.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Sanders AB, Kern KB, Gragg S, Ewy GA.
Neurological benefits from the use of early cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Ann Emerg Med. 1987; 16: 142–146.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Sanders AB, Ewy GA, Taft TV. Prognostic and
therapeutic importance of the aortic diastolic pressure in resuscitation
from cardiac arrest. Crit Care Med. 1984; 12: 871–873.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Sanders AB, Ogle M, Ewy GA. Coronary perfusion
pressure during cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Am J Emerg Med. 1985;
3: 11–14.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Sanders AB, Kern KB, Atlas M, Bragg S, Ewy GA.
Importance of the duration of inadequate coronary perfusion pressure on
resuscitation from cardiac arrest. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1985; 6, 1:
113–118.
- Kern KB, Ewy GA, Voorhees WD, Babbs CF, Tacker
WA. Myocardial perfusion pressure: a predictor of 24 hour survival during
prolonged cardiac arrest in dogs. Resuscitation. 1988; 16: 241–250.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Berg RA, Sanders AB, Kern KB, Hilwig RW,
Heidenreich JW, Porter ME, Ewy GA. Adverse hemodynamic effects of
interrupting chest compression for rescue breathing during cardiopulmonary
resuscitation for ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest. Circulation.
2001; 104: 2465–2470.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Paradis NA, Martin GB, Rivers EP, Goetting MG,
Appleton TJ, Feingold M, Nowak RM. Coronary perfusion pressure and the
return of spontaneous circulation in human cardiopulmonary resuscitation. JAMA.
1990; 263: 1106–1113.[Abstract]
- Redding JS, Pearson JW. Evaluation of drugs for
cardiac resuscitation. Anesthesiology. 1963; 24: 203–207.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Hilwig RW, Kern KB, Berg RA, Sanders AB, Otto
CW, Ewy GA. Catecholamines in cardiac arrest: role of alpha agonists,
beta-adrenergic blockers, and high dose epinephrine. Resuscitation. 2000;
47: 203–208.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Brillman JA, Sanders AB, Otto CW, Fahmy H, Bragg
S, Ewy GA. Outcome of resuscitation from fibrillatory arrest using
epinephrine and phenylephrine in dogs. Crit Care Med. 1985; 13:
912–913.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Chase PB, Kern KB, Sanders AB, Otto CW, Ewy GA.
Effects of graded doses of epinephrine on both noninvasive and invasive
measures of myocardial perfusion and blood flow during cardiopulmonary
resuscitation. Crit Care Med. 1993; 21: 413–419.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Wolck BB, Mauer DK, Schoefmann MF, Teichmann H,
Provo TA, Linder KH, Dick WF, Aeppli D, Lurie KG. Comparison of standard
cardiopulmonary resuscitation versus the combination of active
compression-decompression cardiopulmonary resuscitation and an inspiratory
impedance threshold device for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Circulation.
2003; 108: 2201–2205.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Aufderheide TP, Sigurdsson G, Pirrallo RG,
Yannopoulos D, McKnite S, von Briesen C, Sparks CW, Conrad CJ, Provo TA,
Lurie KG. Hyperventilation-induced hypotension during cardiopulmonary
resuscitation. Circulation. 2004; 109: 1960–1965.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Wenzel V, Krismer AC, Arntz HR, Sitter H,
Stadbauer KH, Linder KH. A comparison of vasopressin and epinephrine for
out-of-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation. N Engl J Med. 2004;
350: 105–113.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Herlitz J, Ekstrom I, Wennerblom B, Axelsson A,
Bang A, Holmberg S. Effect of bystander initiated cardiopulmonary
resuscitation on ventricular fibrillation and survival after witnessed
cardiac arrest outside hospital. Br Heart J. 1994; 72: 408–412.[Abstract]
- Stiell IG, Wells GA, Field B, Spaite DW, Nesbitt
LP, De Maio VJ, Nichol G, Cousineau D, Blackburn J, Munkley D,
Luinstra-Toohey L, Campeau T, Dagnone E, Lyver M, for the Onterio
Prehospital Advanced Life Support Study Group. Advanced cardiac life
support in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. N. Engl J Med. 2004;
351: 647–656.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Locke CJ, Berg RA, Sanders AB, Davis MF,
Milander MM, Kern KB, Ewy GA. Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation:
concerns about mouth-to-mouth contact. Arch Intern Med. 1995; 155:
938–943.[Abstract]
- Ornato JP, Hallagan LF, McMahan SB, Peeples EH,
Rostafinski AG. Attitudes of BCLS instructors about mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation during the AIDS epidemic. Ann Emerg Med. 1990; 19:
151–156.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Brenner BE, Kauffman J. Reluctance of internists
and medical nurses to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Arch Intern
Med. 1993; 153: 1763–1769.[Abstract]
- Brenner B, Stark B, Kauffman J. The reluctance
of house staff to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in the inpatient
setting: what are the considerations? Resuscitation. 1994; 28:
185–193.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Brenner BE, Kauffman J, Sachter JJ. Comparison
of the reluctance of house staff of metropolitan and suburban hospitals to
perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Resuscitation. 1996; 32:
5–12.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Eisenberg MS, Bergner L, Hallstrom A. Cardiac
resuscitation in the community: importance of rapid provision and
implication of program planning. JAMA. 1979; 241: 1905–1907.[Abstract]
- Cummins RO, Ornato JP, Thies WH, Pepe PE.
Improving survival from sudden cardiac arrest: the "chain of
survival" concept: a statement for health professionals from the
Advanced Cardiac Life Support Subcommittee and Emergency Cardiac Care
Committee, American Heart Association. Circulation. 1991; 83:
1832–1847.[Free Full Text]
- Berg RA, Kern KB, Hilwig RW, Ewy GA. Assisted
ventilation during "bystander" CPR in a swine acute myocardial
infarction model does not improve outcome. Circulation. 1997; 96:
4364–4371.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Kern KB, Hilwig RW, Berg RA, Sanders AB, Ewy GA.
Importance of continuous chest compression during cardiopulmonary
resuscitation: improved outcome during a simulated single lay-rescuer
scenario. Circulation. 2002; 105: 645–649.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Berg RA, Wilcoxson D, Hilwig RW, Kern KB,
Sanders AB, Otto CW, Eklund DK, Ewy GA. The need for ventilatory support
during bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Ann Emerg Med. 1995;
26: 342–350.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Berg RA, Kern KB, Hilwig RW, Berg M, Sanders AB,
Otto CW, Ewy GA. Assisted ventilation does not improve outcome in a
porcine model of single rescuer bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Circulation.
1997; 95: 1635–1641.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Kern KB, Hilwig RW, Berg RA, Ewy GA. Efficacy of
chest compression-only BLS CPR
in the presence of an occluded airway. Resuscitation. 1998; 39:
179–188.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Tang W, Weil MH, Sun S, Kette D, Kette F,
Gazmuri RJ, O’Connell F, Bisera J. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation by
precordial compression but without mechanical ventilation. Am J Respir
Crit Care Med. 1994; 150: 1709–1713.[Abstract]
- Guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation and
emergency cardiac care: Emergency Cardiac Care Committee and
Subcommittees, American Heart Association: part I: introduction. JAMA. 1992;
268: 2171–2241.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- American Heart Association, in collaboration
with International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation. Guidelines 2000 for
cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care:
international consensus on science, part 6: advanced cardiovascular life support.
Circulation. 2000; 102 (suppl I): I-86–I-171.[Free Full Text]
- Assar D, Chamberlain D, Colquhoun M, Donnelly P,
Handley AJ, Leaves S, Kern KB. Randomized controlled trials of staged
teaching for basic life support: 1: skill acquisition at bronze stage. Resuscitation.
2000; 45: 7–15.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Heidenreich JW, Higdon TA, Kern KB, Sanders AB,
Berg RA, Niebler R, Hendrickson J, Ewy GA. Single rescuer cardiopulmonary
resuscitation: "two quick breaths"—an oxymoron. Resuscitation.
2004; 62: 283–289.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Higdon TA, Heidenreich JW, Kern KB, Sanders AB,
Berg RA, Hilwig RW, Clark LL, Ewy GA. Single rescuer cardiopulmonary
resuscitation: can anyone perform to the Guidelines 2000 recommendations? Circulation.
2004; 110 (suppl III): III-414. Abstract.
- Yu T, Weil MH, Tang W, Sun S, Klouche K, Povoas
H, Bisera J. Adverse outcomes of interrupted precordial compression during
automated defibrillation. Circulation. 2002; 106: 368–372.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Feneley MP, Maier GW, Kern KB, Gaynor JW, Gall
SA Jr, Sanders AB, Raessler K, Muhlbaier LH, Rankin JS, Ewy GA. Influence
of compression rate on initial success of resuscitation and 24-hour
survival after prolonged manual cardiopulmonary resuscitation in dogs. Circulation.
1988; 77: 240–250.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Kern KB, Sanders AB, Raife J, Milander MM, Otto
CW, Ewy GA. A study of chest compression rates during cardiopulmonary
resuscitation in humans: the importance of rate-directed chest compressions.
Arch Intern Med. 1992; 151: 145–149.[CrossRef]
- Meursing BTJ, Wulterkens DW, van Kesteren RG. The ABC of
resuscitation and the Dutch (re)treat. Resuscitation. 2005; 64:
279–286.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Berg RA. Role of mouth-to-mouth rescue breathing
in bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation for asphyxial cardiac arrest. Crit
Care Med. 2000; 28: N193–N195.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Nagao K, Kanmatsuse K, Kikushima K, Sakamoto T,
Igarashi M, Saito A, Hori S, Kanesaka S, Hamabe Y, Hayashi N. The effect
of chest compression alone during bystander-initiated cardiopulmonary
resuscitation. Circulation. 2004; 110 (suppl III): III-455. Abstract.
- Hallstrom A, Cobb L, Johnson E, Copass M.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation by chest compression alone or with
mouth-to-mouth ventilation. N Engl J Med. 2000; 342: 1546–1553.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Cobb LA, Fahrenbruch CE, Walsh TR, Compass MK,
Olsufka M, Breskin B, Hallstrom AP. Influence of cardiopulmonary
resuscitation prior to defibrillation in patients with out-of-hospital
ventricular fibrillation. JAMA. 1999; 281: 1182–1188.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Wik L, Hansen TB, Fylling F, Steen T, Vaagenes
P, Auestad BH, Steen PA. Delaying defibrillation to give basic
cardiopulmonary resuscitation to patients with out-of-hospital ventricular
fibrillation: a randomized trial. JAMA. 2003; 289: 1389–1395.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Gausche M, Lewis RJ, Stratton SJ, Haynes BE,
Gunter CS, Goodrich SM, Poore PD, McCollough MD, Henderson DP, Pratt FD,
Seidel JA. Effect of out-of-hospital pediatric endotracheal intubation on
survival and neurological outcome: a controlled clinical trial. JAMA. 2000;
283: 783–790.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Berg RA, Hilwig RW, Kern KB, Ewy GA.
Precountershock cardiopulmonary resuscitation improves ventricular
fibrillation median frequency and myocardial readiness for successful
defibrillation from prolonged ventricular fibrillation: a randomized,
controlled swine study. Ann Emerg Med. 2002; 40: 563–570.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Berg RA, Hilwig RW, Kern KB, Sanders AB, Xavier
LC, Ewy GA. Automated external defibrillation versus manual defibrillation
for prolonged ventricular fibrillation: lethal delays of chest
compressions before and after countershocks. Ann Emerg Med. 2003;
42: 458–467.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Eftestol T, Sunde K, Steen PA. Effects of
interrupting precordial compressions on the calculated probability of
defibrillation success during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Circulation.
2002; 105: 2270–2273.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Redding JS, Haynes RR, Thomas JD. Drug therapy
in resuscitation from electromechanical dissociation. Crit Care Med. 1983;
11: 681–683.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Ewy GA. Defining electromechanical dissociation.
Ann Emerg Med. 1984; 13: 830–832.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Milander MM, Hiscok PS, Sanders AB, Kern KB,
Berg RA, Ewy GA. Chest compression and ventilation rates during
cardiopulmonary resuscitation: the effects of audible tone guidance. Acad
Emerg Med. 1995; 2: 708–713.[Abstract]
- Yannopoulos D, Sigurdsson G, McKnite S, Benditt
D, Lurie KG. Reducing ventilation frequency combined with an inspiratory
impedance device improves CPR efficiency in swine model of cardiac arrest.
Resuscitation. 2004; 61: 75–82.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Dorph E, Wik L, Steen PA. Arterial blood gases
with 700 ml tidal volumes during out-of-hospital CPR. Resuscitation. 2004;
61: 23–27.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- Benson DW, Williams GR Jr, Spencer FC, Yates AJ.
The use of hypothermia after cardiac arrest. Anesth Analg. 1959;
38: 423–428.[Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]
- The Hypothermia After Cardiac Arrest Study
Group. Mild therapeutic hypothermia to improve the neurologic outcome
after cardiac arrest. N Engl J Med. 2002; 346: 549–556.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Bernard SA, Gray TW, Buist MD, Jones BM,
Silverster W, Gutteridge G, Smith K. Treatment of comatose survivors of
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest with induced hypothermia. N Engl J Med. 2002;
346: 557–563.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Nolan JP, Morley PT, Vanden Hoek TL, Hickey RW,
Kloeck WG, Billi J, Bottiger BW, Morley PT, Nolan JP, Okada K, Reyes C, Shuster
M, Steen PA, Weil MH, Wenzel V, Hickey RW, Carli P, Vanden Hoek TL, Atkins
D; for the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation. Therapeutic
hypothermia after cardiac arrest: an advisory statement by the Advanced
Life Support Task Force of the International Liaison Committee on
Resuscitation. Circulation. 2003; 108: 118–121.[Free Full Text]
- Sanders AB, Kern KB, Berg RA, Hilwig RW, Heidenrich
J, Ewy GA. Survival and neurologic outcome after cardiopulmonary
resuscitation with four different chest compression-ventilations ratios. Ann
Emerg Med. 2002; 40: 553–562.[CrossRef][Medline]
[Order
article via Infotrieve]