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Transcript
CARDIO PULMO (CEREBRAL)
RESUSCITATION
Jozef Firment
Judita Capková
Department of
Anaesthesiology & Intensive Medicine
Šafárik University Faculty of Medicine, Košice
1
Most frequent causes
of out-of-hospital cardiac
arrest CA
2
Most common causes of
cardiac arrest CA
• 1. place
IHD...Myocardial
infarction (80%)
• Hypertension
• Valvular disease,..
•
• Trauma
• Poisoning
• Drowning
Ventricular fibrilation
• Hypotermia...
3
Most common causes of
cardiac arrest CA
• 1. place
IHD...Myocardial
infarction
• Hypertension
Electrical defibrillation –
Valvular
disease,..
only• effective
treatment
for VF
•
• Trauma
• Poisoning
• Drowning
Ventricular fibrilation
• Hypotermia...
4
Cause of CA in
• Trauma
• Drowning
• Drug overdose
• Children
Asphyxia
Rescue breaths are critical for
resuscitation
5
• In- hospital arrests are due tu PEA or
asystole (60-70%)
- early recognition of pp at risk may
prevent arrest – „Medical Emergency
Teams“
• Overall survival to hospital discharge is
10%
6
THE CHAIN OF SURVIVAL
Early
access
to
emergency
services
up to 4 min
up to 8 min
Early
BLS
to
buy
time
Early
defibrillation
to reverse
VF
Early
advanced
care
to
stabilise
7
8
Cervical spine injury
• Jaw thrust (no for lay rescuer) or chin lift
with manual inline stabilisation
of head and neck by an assistant
9
AGONAL BREATHING
• Occurs shortly after the heart stops
in up to 40% of cardiac arrests
• Described as barely, heavy, noisy or
gasping breathing
• Recognise as a sign of cardiac arrest
10
EXTERNAL
CHEST
COMPRESSIONS
one rescuer
30:2
f : 100-120/min.
5-6 cm
11
Effective chest compressions
12
Effective chest compressions
13
Continous chest compression - only
14
Only 1 in 4 patients in CA
recieves bystander CPR
• transmission of infection:
- tuberculosis, SARS, H1N1 –
small number,
- HIV – never reported
15
Protective devices:
16
Continous chest compression - only
• If layman is not able or is unwilling to
perform mouth to mouth breathing
• f: 100/min without stopping
17
 Basic life support C,A,B
 Advanced life support
C, A, B, Drugs, ECG, Fibrilation
treatment - defibrilation...
18
In hospital CPRAdvanced life support
 One person starts 30:2
others call resuscitation team
+ defibrillator, r. equipments (airway, ambu bag,
adrenalin,..)
 only one person: leaves the patient,
calls resuscitation team
starts 30:2
19
VENTILATION MANAGEMENT
ALS –In-hospital CPR
A:
• Oral/nasal airway
• Tracheal intubation : f: 10/min , Fi02 = 1,0
(reservoir bag), VT(tidal volume) 6-7 ml/kg,
(chest compressions and
ventilations continue uninterupted)
20
Laryngeal mask,
laryngeal tube
Oe-Trach Combitube
Oe
90%
Trach
21
Campbell
B:
adults:
15
- “ children
20
- “ -
O2
l/min
13
FiO2
%
85-100
4
5
>40
85-100
2
>40
BAG WITH OXYGEN SUPPLY
VT x f
1000 x
dtto
300 x
dtto
Inlet O2
10 - 13 l/min
22
Advanced life support
Self-inflating bag-mask +
oropharyngeal airway : C:V= 30:2
Hyperventilation
reduces cerebral blood
flow
The quality of
chest compressions is
frequently suboptimal,
team leader should
change CPR providers
23
Hearth rhytms associated with CA:
Ventricular fibrillation
Asystole
Ventricular tachycardia
Electro-mechanical
disociation (EMD)
Pulseless ventricular
activity (PVA)
24
25
DEFIBRILLATION
• Paddle positions (sternum, apex),
no over the breast tissue
• Self- adhesive pads (sparks!!)
-the best
• Biphasic defibrilators:
1. 150-200J
2. 150-360J,....
• CPR for 2 min (5 x 30:2)
after shock
26
DEFIBRILLATION
• Check the rhythm
(organised QRS complexes:
regular + narrow- feeling for a pulse)
• After the third shock give:
adrenalin 1mg every 3-5 min. iv
amiodaron 300mg iv
• Time between CC and shock delivery
< 5s
• Signs of life return :normal breathing,
movement, coughing, puls
27
A precordial thump
• Generates a small electrical shock
• In witnessed and monitored
VF/VT arrests if a defibrillator is not
immediately available
•The ulnar edge of fist
the lower half of sternum
from a height of 20 cm
•Converting VT to sinus rhytm
28
29
LIFE-THREATENING CARDIAC
RHYTHM DISTURBANCES
Cardiac arrest (asystole)
Fine VF will not be shocked successfully
Pulseless electrical activity (PEA, EMD)myocardial contractions are too weak to produce pulse or blood
pressure
30
POTENTIALLY
REVERSIBLE CAUSES
(5 H’s & 5 T’s):
•
•
•
•
Hypoxia
Hypovolemia
Hypothermia
Hyper/hypoK+and
metabolic
disorders
• H+ ions (acidosis)
• Tension
pneumothorax
• Tamponade
• Toxic/therap.
disturbances
• Thrombosis coronary
• Thrombosis
pulmonary
31
POTENTIALLY REVERSIBLE
CAUSES
(5 H’s & 5 T’s):
• Hypoxia – ventilation with 100% oxygen
• Hypovolemia (haemorrhage-trauma, GIT
bleeding,rupture of an aortic aneurysm- fluid
( saline or Hartman´s solution + urgent
surgery)
• Hypothermia (in drowning incident)
• Hyper/hypoK+and metabolic disorders
• H+ ions (acidosis)
32
POTENTIALLY REVERSIBLE
CAUSES
•
•
•
•
•
(5 H’s & 5 T’s):
Tension pneumothorax- needle
thoracocentesis and chest drain
Tamponade – needle pericardiocentesis
Toxic substances – appropriate
antidotes
Thrombosis coronary - thrombolysis
Thrombosis pulmonary – trombolytic
drug
33
Thoracocentesis
34
Needle pericardiocentesis
35
Thrombosis pulmonary
36
DRUGS USED CPR
1. Adrenaline (EPINEPHRINE)
1 mg á 3’- 5 ’
(EVERY SECOND LOOP(5x CV 30:2) OF THE
ALGORYTHM)
alpha adrenergic actions cause vasoconstriction,
increases myocardial and cerebral perfusion pressure
2. Bicarbonate
50ml 8,4%
-pH < 7.1, BE < -10
-hyperkalaemia
-tricyclic antidepressant overdose
& equipment
• (defibrilator)
• oxygen
• Ambu bag
• face mask
• F1/1
• infusion set
• plastic IV cannula
3. Amiodarone 300 mg after a third unsuccessful
defibrillation in VF/VT...150 mg (inf. 900mg/24h)
lidocaine 1 mg/kg- alternative
37
DRUG DELIVERY ROUTES
• Intravenous (central, peripheral
+ 20 ml sol. F 1/1 + elevate 10-20 s)
• Intraosseal – effective concentrations of
drugs is achieved very quickly
• Tracheal (2-3x more dose + 10 ml water)
(adrenaline, lidocaine, atropine)
• NEVER IM nor SC !!!
38
EZ-IO AD Proximal Tibial Access
Intraosseous Infusion System
39
Automatický intraoseálny
injektor
40
Post – resuscitation care
• Stable cardiac rhythm, normal
haemodynamic function (thrombolysis,
percutaneous coronary intervention)
• Intubation, ventilation, sedation
• Therapeutical hypothermia
• Comatose adults after out-of-hospital VF cardiac arrest
were cooled to 32-34 oC for 12-24 h.
• Improved neurological outcome
41
• www.erc.edu
• www.resus.org. uk
• Resuscitation (in october 2010)
• http://www.lf.upjs.sk/kaim/pregradualne
_vzdelavanie.html
42
Thank you!
[email protected]
43
Open chest CPR
• better coronary perfusion
• Trauma, after cardiothoracic surgery,
when chest or abdomen is already open
Ectopic rhythm
Normal SR
1
2
5
Rhythm
disorders at AMI
3
Thrombus
development
Acute MI
4
45
LIFE-THREATENING CARDIAC
RHYTHM DISTURBANCES
1. Ventricular fibrillation,
pulseless ventricular
tachycardia
2. Cardiac arrest (asystole)
3. Pulseless electrical activity
(PEA, EMD)
= circulatoty arrest
46
 Basic life support - to buy time for
 Advanced life support – to restore
circulation
1961: Peter Safar
47
Effective chest compressions
48