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Pre-shock chest compression pause effects on termination of ventricular fibrillation/tachycardia and return of organized rhythm within mechanical and manual cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Resuscitation 2015 Aug;93:158-63

Date

05/03/2015

Pubmed ID

25933511

DOI

10.1016/j.resuscitation.2015.04.023

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84937518747 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   19 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Shorter manual chest compression pauses prior to defibrillation attempts is reported to improve the defibrillation success rate. Mechanical load-distributing band (LDB-) CPR enables shocks without compression pause. We studied pre-shock pause and termination of ventricular fibrillation/pulseless ventricular tachycardia 5s post-shock (TOF) and return of organized rhythm (ROOR) with LDB and manual (M-) CPR.

METHODS: In a secondary analysis from the Circulation Improving Resuscitation Care trial, patients with initial shockable rhythm and interpretable post-shock rhythms were included. Pre-shock rhythm, pause duration (if any), and post-shock rhythm were obtained for each shock. Associations between TOF/ROOR and pre-shock pause duration, including no pause shocks with LDB-CPR, were analyzed with Chi-square test. A p-value <0.05 was considered statistically significant.

RESULTS: For TOF and ROOR analyses we included 417 LDB-CPR patients with 1476 and 1438 shocks, and 495 M-CPR patients with 1839 and 1796 shocks, respectively. For first shocks with LDB-CPR, pre-shock pause was associated with TOF (p=0.049) with lowest TOF (77%) for shocks given without pre-shock compression pause. This association was not significant when all shocks were included (p=0.07) and not for ROOR. With M-CPR there were no significant associations between shock-related chest compression pause duration and TOF or ROOR.

CONCLUSION: For first shocks with LDB-CPR, termination of fibrillation was associated with pre-shock pause duration. There was no association for the rate of return of organized rhythm. For M-CPR, where no shocks were given during continuous chest compressions, there were no associations between pre-shock pause duration and TOF or ROOR.

Author List

Olsen JA, Brunborg C, Steinberg M, Persse D, Sterz F, Lozano M Jr, Westfall M, Travis DT, Lerner EB, Brouwer MA, Wik L



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Defibrillators
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Myocardial Contraction
Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest
Pulsatile Flow
Shock
Tachycardia, Ventricular
Time Factors
Ventricular Fibrillation