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Time-dependent interventions.
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MedLine Citation:
PMID:  14975039     Owner:  NLM     Status:  MEDLINE    
Abstract/OtherAbstract:
The contribution by Pepe and colleagues provides additional evidence that initial defibrillation is not necessarily the optimal intervention for victims of cardiac arrest and especially when cardiac arrest has been untreated for more than 3 min. Precordial compression therefore remains the mainstay of basic life support cardiopulmonary resuscitation after sudden death. It is increasingly apparent that neither epinephrine whether in conventional or high doses nor vasopressin improve ultimate survival. To the contrary, there is evidence favoring beta1-adrenergic blockade.
Authors:
Max Harry Weil; Wanchun Tang
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Publication Detail:
Type:  Editorial     Date:  2003-11-11
Journal Detail:
Title:  Critical care (London, England)     Volume:  8     ISSN:  1466-609X     ISO Abbreviation:  Crit Care     Publication Date:  2004 Feb 
Date Detail:
Created Date:  2004-02-20     Completed Date:  2004-05-13     Revised Date:  2009-11-18    
Medline Journal Info:
Nlm Unique ID:  9801902     Medline TA:  Crit Care     Country:  England    
Other Details:
Languages:  eng     Pagination:  11-2     Citation Subset:  IM    
Affiliation:
Institute of Critical Care Medicine, Palm Springs, California, USA. weilm@911research.org
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MeSH Terms
Descriptor/Qualifier:
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation / methods*
Humans
Time Factors*
United States
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From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine

Full Text
Journal Information
Journal ID (nlm-ta): Crit Care
ISSN: 1364-8535
ISSN: 1466-609X
Publisher: BioMed Central, London
Article Information
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Copyright ? 2004 BioMed Central Ltd
Print publication date: Year: 2004
Electronic publication date: Day: 11 Month: 11 Year: 2003
Volume: 8 Issue: 1
First Page: 11 Last Page: 12
ID: 420057
Publisher Id: cc2395
PubMed Id: 14975039
DOI: 10.1186/cc2395

Time-dependent interventions
Max Harry Weil1 Email: weilm@911research.org
Wanchun Tang1
1Institute of Critical Care Medicine, Palm Springs, California, USA

A reappraisal of the priorities of cardiopulmonary resuscitation by Pepe and colleagues [1] calls attention to the evidence that defibrillation may not be the optimal initial intervention. Initial precordial compression after more than perhaps 3 minutes of untreated cardiac arrest greatly improves the likelihood of successful conversion of ventricular fibrillation with restoration of spontaneous circulation [2,3]. Since it is often very difficult to gauge this time interval, and whether it exceeds 3 min, a number of both preclinical investigators [4-6] and clinical investigators [7,8] have sought an electrocardiographic predictor of the likelihood that an electrical shock will restore circulation. It is to this extent that we applaud the authors' call for caution lest the availability and promotion of automated external defibrillators diminishes the preparedness of the rescuer to proceed with more conventional basic life support. The authors appropriately point to the time dependency of basic life support interventions.

Pepe and colleagues then extend their discussion to advanced cardiac life support, and especially pharmacological interventions. In the context of the time dependency of interventions, they are not prepared to discard the possibility that high-dose epinephrine will improve outcome. Indeed, they favor the use of cocktails, entertaining the possibility that epinephrine may be administered conjointly with antioxidants and anti-arrhythmic drugs. Although we agree with Pepe and colleagues in implicating the myocardial energy/supply relationship as an important issue, we wish to point out that beta-adrenergic agonists, and to a lesser extent the alpha1 actions, greatly increase myocardial energy consumption and thereby intensify the severity of myocardial injury [9,10]. Although the alpha-adrenergic effects increase coronary perfusion pressure and transiently increase myocardial blood flow, the downside is major. The inotropic and chronotropic effects produce greater global myocardial ischemia, greater post-resuscitation ventricular ectopy and recurrent ventricular tachycardia, and recurrent ventricular fibrillation. Even more importantly, the adrenergic inotropic and chronotropic actions result in greater severity of post-resuscitation myocardial dysfunction.

Although epinephrine has been used as a resuscitative drug for more than a century, and although there is evidence that epinephrine may facilitate initial resuscitation, there is no proof of ultimate clinical benefit in terms of survival. To the contrary, we suspect that vasopressor agents with no inotropic and chronotropic actions are likely to come to the fore. This has prompted interest in more selective vasopressor agents, including ?-methylnorepinephrine [10] and nonadrenergic vasopressin [11,12]. Moreover, as yet unpublished preclinical studies from our group now suggest a place for beta-adrenergic blocking agents.

Looking to the future, we also see an opportunity for much improvement in sequencing interventions. In support of the conclusions reached by Pepe and colleagues, additional precision in sequencing cardiopulmonary resuscitation interventions has a high likelihood of improving outcomes. Perhaps one measurement, not cited by the authors, is end-tidal carbon dioxide. Both experimentally and clinically, end-tidal carbon dioxide has been a noninvasive monitor of blood flow generated by precordial compression [13,14]. It serves as quality control of precordial compression and allows chest compression to remain uninterrupted. No longer will advanced cardiac life support rescuers need electrocardiographic confirmation of the return of spontaneous circulation because it is overtly signaled by an overshoot in the end-tidal carbon dioxide.


Competing interests

None declared.


References
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Article Categories:
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Keywords: ?-methylnorepinephrine, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, defibrillation, end-tidal CO2, epinephrine.

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