Low dose sodium nitrite does not cause significant hemodynamic effect in patients with OHCA, which suggests that nitrite can be delivered safely in this critically ill patient population. Higher doses of sodium nitrite are necessary in order to achieve target serum level of 10μM.
BackgroundCardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) improves outcomes after cardiac arrest. Much of the lay public is untrained in CPR skills. We evaluated the effectiveness of a compression-only CPR video self-instruction (VSI) with a personal manikin in the lay public.MethodsAdults without prior CPR training in the past year or responsibility to provide medical care were randomized into one of three groups: 1) Untrained before testing, 2) 10-minute VSI in compressions-only CPR (CPR Anytime, American Heart Association, Dallas, TX), or 3) 22-minute VSI in compressions and ventilations (CPR Anytime). CPR proficiency was assessed using a sensored manikin. The primary outcome was composite skill competence of 90% during five minutes of skill demonstration. Evaluated were alternative cut-points for skill competence and individual components of CPR. 488 subjects (143 in untrained group, 202 in compressions-only group and 143 in compressions and ventilation group) were required to detect 21% competency with compressions-only versus 7% with untrained and 34% with compressions and ventilations.ResultsAnalyzable data were available for the untrained group (n = 135), compressions-only group (n = 185) and the compressions and ventilation group (n = 119). Four (3%) achieved competency in the untrained group (p-value = 0.57 versus compressions-only), nine (4.9%) in the compressions-only group, and 12 (10.1%) in the compressions and ventilations group (p-value 0.13 vs. compressions-only). The compressions-only group had a greater proportion of correct compressions (p-value = 0.028) and compressions with correct hand placement (p-value = 0.0004) compared to the untrained group.ConclusionsVSI in compressions-only CPR did not achieve greater overall competency but did achieve some CPR skills better than without training.
Introduction:
Out-of-hospital circulatory arrest (OHCA) is commonly assumed to be from a cardiac cause although routine early invasive coronary angiography (ICA) remains controversial and has a relatively high proportion of studies without obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). The ability of coronary CT angiography (CCTA) to detect significant CAD in OHCA survivors has not been evaluated.
Methods:
The prospective CT-FIRST trial enrolled 104 OHCA survivors who had an early (<6 hours from hospital arrival) head-to-pelvis CT scan that included an ECG-gated CCTA (FORCE CT, Siemens). The CCTA scanned 0-90% of the cardiac cycle without routine use of beta blockers or nitroglycerin. Treating physicians were blinded to the CCTA analysis. ICA was ordered at the discretion of treating physicians. Readers blinded to corresponding studies analyzed CCTA and ICA for coronary stenoses using a 20 segment coronary model. Obstructive CAD was assumed for >50% stenosis. Patient-level diagnostic accuracy calculations for CCTA to identify obstructive CAD used ICA as the standard.
Results:
Of the 104 enrolled patients, 28 (27%) had both CT and ICA. All CCTA studies were evaluable. Diagnostic accuracy data are shown in the Table. Overall, diagnostic accuracy measures were excellent between CCTA and ICA at the patient level.
Conclusions:
Early CCTA in OHCA survivors has high diagnostic accuracy for obstructive coronary artery disease and could be used as a gatekeeper to ICA.
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