Bystander cardiopulmonary
resuscitation. Is ventilation
necessary?
RA Berg, KB Kern, AB Sanders, CW
Otto, RW Hilwig and GA Ewy
Department of
Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson.
BACKGROUND. Prompt initiation of bystander cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR) improves survival. Basic life support with
mouth-to- mouth ventilation and chest compressions is intimidating,
difficult to remember, and difficult to perform. Chest compressions
alone can be easily taught, easily remembered, easily performed,
adequately taught by dispatcher-delivered telephone instruction, and
more readily accepted by the public. The principal objective of this
study was to evaluate the need for ventilation during CPR in a
clinically relevant swine model of prehospital
witnessed cardiac arrest. METHODS AND
RESULTS. Thirty seconds after ventricular fibrillation, swine
were randomly assigned to 12 minutes of chest compressions plus
mechanical ventilation (group A), chest compressions only (group B),
or no CPR (group C). Standard advanced cardiac life support was then
provided. Animals successfully resuscitated were supported for 2
hours in an intensive care setting, and then observed for 24 hours.
All 16 swine in groups A and B were successfully resuscitated and neurologically
normal at 24 hours, whereas only 2 of 8 group C animals survived for
24 hours (P < .001, Fisher's exact test). One of the 2 group C
survivors was comatose and unresponsive. CONCLUSIONS.
In this swine model of witnessed prehospital
cardiac arrest, the survival and neurological outcome data establish
that prompt initiation of chest compressions alone appears to be as
effective as chest compressions plus ventilation and that both
techniques of bystander CPR markedly improve outcome compared with no
bystander CPR.