2001
DOI: 10.4037/ajcc2001.10.6.391
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End-tidal carbon dioxide measurements as a prognostic indicator of outcome in cardiac arrest

Abstract: PURPOSE: To evaluate the use of end-tidal carbon dioxide values in predicting survival in cardiopulmonary arrest. BACKGROUND: The decision about when to terminate resuscitative efforts for patients with cardiopulmonary arrest is often subjective. End-tidal carbon dioxide values have been suggested as potential objective criteriafor making this decision. METHODS: This study was a cooperative effort of the St Louis chapter of the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses and its members and involved 6 hospita… Show more

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Cited by 91 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Chest compression effectiveness is confirmed by an appropriate capnographic waveform with ETCO 2 values between 10-20 mm Hg or greater, corresponding to the artificial circulation generated by closed chest compressions (60,61). ETCO 2 values < 10 mm Hg indicate suboptimal compression quality and are a poor prognostic indicator of eventual mortality (62,63). If ROSC is difficult to appreciate on physical examination, an abrupt rise in ETCO 2 of $10 mm Hg can be used as a surrogate marker for ROSC (64).…”
Section: Arterial Line Placement End-tidal Co 2 and Cardiac Epinepmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chest compression effectiveness is confirmed by an appropriate capnographic waveform with ETCO 2 values between 10-20 mm Hg or greater, corresponding to the artificial circulation generated by closed chest compressions (60,61). ETCO 2 values < 10 mm Hg indicate suboptimal compression quality and are a poor prognostic indicator of eventual mortality (62,63). If ROSC is difficult to appreciate on physical examination, an abrupt rise in ETCO 2 of $10 mm Hg can be used as a surrogate marker for ROSC (64).…”
Section: Arterial Line Placement End-tidal Co 2 and Cardiac Epinepmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The monitoring of EtCO 2 during CPR gives information regarding cardiac output and cardiac index (LOE 3 and 6),, CPP (LOE 3 and 6),, and mean aortic pressure (LOE 6) during CPR. Studies focusing on the utility of EtCO 2 monitoring for predicting CPR outcome (primarily evaluating adult humans with nontraumatic, primary cardiac arrest [LOE 6]), uniformly found that patients with higher EtCO 2 over the course of CPR were more likely to achieve ROSC, survival to hospital discharge, or both , , , , , . Only a single indexed study (LOE 6) was neutral on the subject of EtCO 2 monitoring pertaining to CPR outcome, finding no difference between EtCO 2 in CPA patients that could not be resuscitated (13.7 ± 7 mm Hg) and EtCO 2 in CPA patients that achieved ROSC (12.9 ± 5 mm Hg) …”
Section: Monitoring During Cprmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Monitoring end-tidal carbon dioxide tension during chest compression also can be a useful measurement of cardiac output. 10…”
Section: Basic Life Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%