That is an unfortunately named article. The Cardio Cerebral Rescutation (CCR) is becoming the standard of care in Arizona. While many agencies have adopted the 2005 AHA guidelines, we have added CCR/[url=http://www.azshare.gov/index.htm[SHARE[/url] to our protocols. AHA has made some improvements over the past few years, but they are too driven by where their donations come from. The change to 2 minutes of adequate CPR prior to defibrillation, etc and the change a 30:2 compressions to ventilations ratio are a direct response to the research done by the Saver Heart Hospital and data for Seattle and Wisconsin. This change for out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients is a huge improvement in management. Communities around me have been seeing 300-400% improvements in survival rates! We have only used it on a few patients, our demographics lend to cardiac arrest by other causes then sudden cardiac death. For areas that aren?t utilizing this protocol, you can take some key points away from it to help your patients.
1. This is addressed in 2005 AHA, but you need to fluff up the heart a little before defibrillation. 2 minutes of CPR with 100 gorilla compressions/min. Push fast, push hard, push deep! Most victims of cardiac arrest have adequate PaO2 (blood oxygen levels) for a little that their heart will benefit from this gorilla CPR and be more likely to respond to defibrillation. Don?t stop compressions from any reason that absolutely isn?t necessary.
2. Get venous access in early, while your partner is doing compressions and get Epi on board now. Get a few minutes of compressions, drugs and shocks onboard before attempting to Intubate. If your agency allows use quick access devices like IOs and Combi-tubes or LMAs (ILMA if available). These devices save time, your patient?s time. The old standard FAST-1 Sternal IOs work great, and the new EZ-IO and BIG devices are even better! A combi-tube and a LMA are better than an OPA and the patient can be intubated later once they have a return of spontaneous pulses. If you have ventilated you patient for an extended period utilizing a non-definitive airway, remember an OG or NG tube can be a great way to relieve gastric distension and improve ventilation compliance.
3. When you do have a return of spontaneous circulation, BE AGREESIVE. Know you post-arrest protocol, check blood glucose, give fluid, break out the pressors, maintain adequate ventilation, etc. ROSC hearts are more likely to return to arrest again. Good uninterrupted, compressions are the corner stone of CCR and you will be likely to see more ROSC than in the past? be prepared!
All too often protocols are written by those who have never set foot in an ambulance, have never been woken up at 3am for a call, never had to work on a patient in a rundown apartment whose light is from the TV who they are stealing power from their neighbor for. Sometimes EMS protocols make sense, sometimes they don?t. We just rewrote all of ours, and they are a huge improvement over or previous version. Some of the medics are less than enthused about the change; mostly because they don?t allow for have measure paramedicine anymore. But, one of the biggest changes we made were to add some of the field tricks into our protocols. Another is giving medics some options where appropriate, like adding IM Valium or Versed for sedation or seizures if an IV cannot be established quickly or safely.
Polak, we don?t give Dextrose before Valium in an actively seizing patient unless we already have a blood glucose reading. That was a change with our previous protocols, in 13 years I have yet to see an actively seizing patient when had a significantly low bG, postictal or ?seizing? according to the bystanders yes, but not the ?someone help me hold her arm so I can give her some valium? seizing patients. Now if I can only get our medical director to sign off on Auto Injectors for Valium <img src="/images/graemlins/laugh.gif" alt="" />
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"Trust in God --and press-check. You cannot ignore danger and call it faith." -Duke