Section 1 Resuscitation
1.1 Basic life support
Introduction
The patient with sudden out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest requires a bystander to initiate a number of actions in rapid sequence for any hope of a successful resuscitation. These steps are known as the ‘Chain of Survival’.1
Development of protocols
The guidelines for BLS must be evidence based and consistent across a wide range of providers. Many countries have established national committees to advise community groups, ambulance services and the medical profession on appropriate BLS guidelines. Table 1.1.1 shows the national associations that make up the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR). This group meets every 5 years to review the BLS guidelines and to consider the scientific evidence that may lead to changes.
American Heart Association |
Australian Resuscitation Council |
European Resuscitation Council |
Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada |
Inter-American Heart Foundation |
New Zealand Resuscitation Council |
Resuscitation Council of Southern Africa |
The most recent revision of the BLS guidelines occurred in 2005 and consisted of a comprehensive evaluation of the scientific literature for each aspect of BLS. Evidence evaluation worksheets were developed (available at www.c2005.org) and were then considered by ILCOR. The final recommendations were published in late 2005.2
Australian Resuscitation Council (ARC) BLS guidelines
Subsequently, each national committee endorsed the guidelines, with minor regional variations to take into account local practices. The recommendations of the Australian Resuscitation Council (ARC) on BLS were published in 2006.3–6
Initial evaluation: DR ABCD approach
A flowchart for the initial evaluation of the collapsed patient is shown in Figure 1.1.1. It includes checking for danger, assessing responsiveness, then opening the airway, giving breaths and cardiac compressions, and attaching an automated defibrillator as soon as possible. This is known as the ‘DR ABCD’ approach. CPR is continued until qualified personnel arrive or signs of life return.6
Airway and breathing
Make an assessment of the airway and breathing if a patient has collapsed and is apparently unconscious.3,4 Place the patient supine, check the airway by visual inspection, and open the airway with a head-tilt and/or a chin-lift manoeuvre.
Circulation
It was traditionally recommended that a bystander should attempt to palpate a pulse in order to diagnose cardiac arrest and, if absent, commence external cardiac compressions (ECC). It is now currently recommended that untrained bystanders do not attempt to palpate for a pulse,5 as there is good evidence that the pulse check is inaccurate in this setting.7 Therefore, cardiac arrest may instead be presumed if breathing is absent, and is highly likely if breathing is inadequate.
Management
Airway obstruction
Make a careful sweep with a finger if inspection of the airway reveals visible foreign material or vomitus in the upper airway. Take particular care not to be bitten, not to cause pharyngeal trauma, and not to propel material down into the lower airway.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
The bystander should immediately commence cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) if cardiac arrest is diagnosed and the EMS has been summoned, using both expired air resuscitation (EAR) and ECC until a defibrillator arrives.6
Expired air resuscitation (EAR) or ‘rescue breathing’
Bystander ECC without EAR
Animal models show that some ventilation occurs during chest compressions, and it has been proposed that EAR may be withheld in adult patients who have a witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. A recent Japanese observational study (SOS-KANTO) compared the outcome of adult patients with a witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest who received ECC only by bystanders with that of patients who received both EAR and ECC ‘conventional CPR’, as well as patients who received no bystander CPR.8 There was a favourable neurological outcome in 6.2% of patients who received ECC only, compared to a 3.1% favourable neurological outcome in the patients who received EAR plus ECC (P = 0.0195). Only 2.2% of patients who received no bystander CPR had a favourable neurological outcome. Therefore, a strong case may be made that bystanders perform only ECC and not EAR.9 However, this recommendation has not currently been endorsed by the Australian Resuscitation Council (ARC).
External cardiac compressions (ECC)
Place the patient supine on a firm surface such as a backboard, firm mattress or even the floor to optimize the effectiveness of chest compressions. Perform compressions that allow equal time for the compression and relaxation phases, with compression being approximately 50% of the cycle. Depress the lower sternum at least 4–5 cm in the adult, with complete recoil of the chest after each compression. Perform ECC at a rate of 100 compressions per minute, to ensure the delivery of a minimum of about 80 compressions per minute when accounting for the period spent on ventilations.5 Recommendations are essentially to ‘push hard, push fast, allow complete release and minimize interruptions’.
‘Cardiac pump’ mechanism
Whatever the predominant mechanism of blood flow, ECC results in only about 20% of cardiac output in the adult, mainly owing to the relative rigidity of the chest wall. Consequently, there is a progressive metabolic acidosis due to inadequate oxygen delivery during CPR. Few adults survive a cardiac arrest when ECC has been given for more than 30 minutes. Thus, most EMS allow paramedics to cease resuscitation if a patient in cardiac arrest has failed to respond to CPR and advanced life support measures after 30 minutes, provided there are no extraordinary circumstances such as hypothermia or drug overdose. See also Ch. 1.2on Advanced Life Support.
Defibrillation
Semi-automatic external defibrillation (SAED)
Most SAEDs have an algorithm that initially requests the delivery of three countershocks if ventricular fibrillation persists. As the recent ILCOR guidelines now recommend a single shock followed by 1 minute of CPR (except when using a manual defibrillator at a witnessed arrest), it is expected that SAEDs will progressively have their electronics upgraded to follow the new recommendations.2
Non-medical personnel and the SAED
Other first responders
A range of situations is proposed where non-medical personnel might use a SAED. Thus, the SAED may be used by first responders such as fire services, who co-respond with ambulance services. In Canada, the state of Ontario implemented an extensive programme to introduce rapid defibrillation across the state.10 The use of fire department first responders resulted in 92.5% of cardiac arrest patients being defibrillated in under 8 minutes, compared to 76.7% under the previous system (P<0.001). Survival to hospital discharge improved from 3.9% (183/4690 patients) to 5.2% (85/1614 patients) (P = 0.03). This study demonstrates that an inexpensive, multifaceted, optimized systems approach to rapid defibrillation can lead to significant improvements in survival after cardiac arrest.
A study of a fire-service first-responder programme in Melbourne, Australia, found that the time to defibrillation was reduced from a mean of 7.1 minutes for ambulance services to 6.0 minutes for a combined approach.11 However, this study was not powered to assess the impact on patient outcome.
Public area SAED
Alternatively, the SAED may be placed in a public area for use by designated personnel, such as security staff who undergo a short training programme. This approach has been shown to be effective in places with large at-risk populations, such as casinos.12
Public-access SAED
The SAED may be placed in a public area for use by personnel with no previous training at all in their use. At Chicago airport defibrillators were placed in strategic locations, with signs advising on their correct use.13 Over a 2-year period there were 21 patients with cardiac arrest, of whom 18 had an initial rhythm of ventricular fibrillation. A defibrillator was applied by a ‘good Samaritan’ bystander in 14 of these 18 patients and 11 were successfully resuscitated. Ten patients were alive and well 1 year later.
Shopping centres and apartment buildings
In a larger study,14 SAEDs were placed in 993 sites such as shopping centres and apartment buildings. More patients survived to hospital discharge when the units were assigned to volunteers trained in CPR plus using an AED (30 survivors among 128 arrests) than when the units were assigned to have volunteers trained in CPR only (15 among 107; P = 0.03). However, as most cardiac arrests occur at home or when ‘out and about’, the widespread implementation of this approach to all public areas would be costly and result in relatively few lives saved.15
Home SAED
Finally, a SAED may be placed in the home of a patient who is at increased risk of sudden cardiac arrest, for use by a relative who might witness the event. However, a recent study that enrolled 7001 patients concluded that survival rates from sudden cardiac arrest at home were not increased when a defibrillator was available in the home. 16
BLS summary
Changes to BLS
The main recent change to basic life support is the so-called DR ABCD approach: the performance of chest compressions at a rate of 100 per minute, with 30 compressions followed by two ventilations, or ‘30:2’, with no pause to determine the presence or absence of a pulse.16 The exceptions to this are resuscitation of the newborn (use a 3:1 ratio of 90 compressions and 30 inflations to achieve 120 ‘events’ per minute); and endotracheally intubated victims (use a ratio of 15:1 in adults and 15:2 in children). Also pulse checks and recovery checks are no longer performed, and CPR is only interrupted when signs of a return of spontaneous circulation are present.17
1 Cummins RO, Ornato JP, Thies WH, Pepe PE. Improving survival from sudden cardiac arrest: The ‘chain of survival’ concept. A statement for health professionals from the advanced cardiac life-support subcommittee and the emergency cardiac care committee, American Heart Association. Circulation. 1991;83:1832-1847.
2 International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation 2005. International consensus on cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care science with treatment recommendations. Resuscitation. 2005;67:181-341.
3 Australian Resuscitation Council. Airway: Australian Resuscitation Council Guideline 2006. Emergency Medicine Australasia. 2006;18:325-327.
4 Australian Resuscitation Council. Breathing: Australian Resuscitation Council Guideline 2006. Emergency Medicine Australasia. 2006;18:328-329.
5 Australian Resuscitation Council. Compressions: Australian Resuscitation Council Guideline 2006. Emergency Medicine Australasia. 2006;18:330-331.
6 Australian Resuscitation Council. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation: Australian Resuscitation Council Guideline 2006. Emergency Medicine Australasia. 2006;18:332-334.
7 Bahr J, Klingler H, Panzer W, et al. Skills of lay people in checking the carotid pulse. Resuscitation. 1997;35:23-26.
8 SOS-KANTO study group. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation by bystanders with chest compression only (SOS-KANTO): an observational study. Lancet. 2007;369:920-926.
9 Ewy GA. Cardiac arrest – guideline changes urgently needed. Lancet. 2007;369:882-884.
10 Stiell IG, Wells GA, Field BJ, et al. Improved out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survival through the inexpensive optimization of an existing defibrillation program. Journal of the American Medical Association. 1999;281:1175-1181.
11 Smith KL, McNeill JJ. Emergency Medical Response Steering Committee. Cardiac arrests treated by ambulance paramedics and fire fighters. Medical Journal of Australia. 2002;177:305-309.
12 Valenzuela T, Roe TJ, Nichol G, et al. Outcomes of rapid defibrillation by security officers after cardiac arrests in casinos. New England Journal of Medicine. 2000;343:1206-1209.
13 Caffrey SL, Willoughby PJ, Pepe PE, Becker LB. Public use of automated external defibrillators. New England Journal of Medicine. 2002;347:1242-1247.
14 Hallstrom AP, Ornato JP, Weisfeldt M, et al. Public-access defibrillation and survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. New England Journal of Medicine. 2004;351:637-646.
15 Pell JP, Sirel JM, Marsden AK, et al. Potential impact of public access defibrillators on survival after out of hospital cardiopulmonary arrest: retrospective cohort study. British Medical Journal. 2002;325:515-520.
16 Bardy GH, Lee KL, Mark DB, et al. Home use of automated external defibrillators for sudden cardiac arrest. New England Journal of Medicine. 2008;358:1793-1804.
17 Wasserthiel J. Australian Resuscitation Guidelines: Applying the evidence and simplifying the process. Emergency Medicine Australasia. 2006;18:317-321.
1.2 Advanced life support
Introduction
Larsen et al., in 1993, calculated the time intervals from collapse to the initiation of BLS, defibrillation and other ALS treatments, and analysed their effect on survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.3 When all three interventions were immediately available the survival rate was 67%. This figure declined by 2.3% per minute of delay to BLS, by a further 1.1% per minute of delay to defibrillation, and by 2.1% per minute to other ALS interventions. Without treatment, the decline in survival rate was the sum of the three coefficients, or 5.5% per minute.
Chain of survival
The importance of rapid treatment for cardiac arrest has led clinicians to develop a systems management approach, represented by the concept of the ‘Chain of Survival’, which has become the widely accepted model for the emergency medical services (EMS) systems.4 The Chain of Survival concept implies that more people survive sudden cardiac arrest when a cluster or sequence of events is set up as rapidly as possible. This Chain of Survival sequence includes:
Aetiology and incidence of cardiac arrest
Aetiology
The commonest cause of sudden cardiac arrest in adults is ischaemic heart disease.1,2,5 Other causes include respiratory failure, drug overdose, metabolic derangements, trauma, hypovolaemia, immersion and hypothermia.
Incidence
The population incidence of sudden cardiac death (within 24 hours of the onset of any symptoms) has been estimated as 1.24:1000/year in the USA.6 The incidence of cardiac arrest notified to ambulances in western metropolitan Melbourne, Australia, in 1995 was approximately 0.72:1000/year.7 From among 20 communities in developed nations worldwide a population average of 0.62:1000/year received attempted resuscitation after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.6
Advanced life support guidelines and algorithms
International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR)
In 2000, the American Heart Association, in collaboration with the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR), convened the International Guidelines 2000 Conference on CPR and Emergency Cardiac Care (ECC). This was the first international assembly gathered specifically to produce international resuscitation guidelines, where the International Guidelines 2000 for CPR and ECC were developed and then published.8 These guidelines represented a consensus of expert individuals and resuscitation councils and organizations across many countries, cultures and disciplines. The underlying principle guiding decision-making was that additions to existing guidelines had to pass a rigorous evidence-based review. Revisions or deletions occurred because of:
Researchers from the ILCOR member councils continued to apply and develop the above evidence evaluation process, which culminated in the publication in 2005 of the Consensus on Science and Treatment Recommendations (CoSTR).1
Consensus on Science and Treatment Recommendations (CoSTR)
Each ILCOR member body has used the CoSTR documents to develop its own guidelines for local use. Thus in 2006 both the Australian Resuscitation Council (ARC)5 and the New Zealand Resuscitation Council (NZRC)9 published their local guidelines. The ARC guideline on Adult Advanced Life Support2 includes an Adult Cardiorespiratory Arrest algorithm (Fig. 1.2.1). This is clear, concise, and easy to memorize and adapt into poster format, and is readily applied clinically.
Fig. 1.2.1 Algorithm for management of adult cardiorespiratory arrest.
(Reproduced with permission from the Australian Resuscitation Council.)
However, resuscitation knowledge is still incomplete, and some of the ALS techniques currently in use are not supported by the highest levels of scientific rigour. Thus strict adherence to any guidelines should be guided by common sense. Individuals with specialist knowledge may modify them according to the level of their expertise and the specific clinical situation or environment in which they practise.10
Initiation of ALS
The ARC guidelines and algorithm qualify the commencement of BLS with the statement ‘if appropriate’.2 This is because BLS is only a temporary and inefficient substitute for normal cardiorespiratory function. ALS interventions are almost always necessary to produce the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC).
Electrical defibrillation is the fundamental tenet of the treatment for VF and pulseless VT. However, the likelihood of defibrillation restoring a sustained, perfusing cardiac rhythm, and of a favourable long-term outcome, exists for as little as 90 seconds after the onset of cardiac arrest. The chances of survival to hospital discharge decline rapidly thereafter, as myocardial high-energy phosphate stores are consumed. Therefore, minimizing the time to defibrillation is the priority in resuscitation from sudden cardiac arrest. The purpose of BLS is to support the patient’s cardiorespiratory status as effectively as possible until equipment – particularly a defibrillator – and drugs become available.1,2
The point of entry into the ALS algorithm depends on the circumstances of the cardiac arrest. In many situations, such as out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, BLS will already have been initiated and should be continued while the defibrillator/monitor is being prepared. Diagnosis must be swift and the defibrillator attached without delay when the patient is being monitored at the time of a cardiac arrest.1,2
Attachment of the defibrillator/monitor and rhythm recogniton
Automated external defibrillator
Apply the self-adhesive pads in the standard anteroapical positions for defibrillation (see below) using an automated external defibrillator (AED). An internal microprocessor analyses the ECG signal and, if VF/VT are detected, it causes the AED to display a warning and then either deliver a shock (automatic) or advise the operator to do so (semi-automatic).2,11,12
Manual external defibrillator
The critical decision for the rescuer after applying the self-adhesive pads or paddles of a manual external defibrillator is whether or not the cardiac rhythm is VF/VT.1,2 Up to 70% of patients with an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest will be in VF/VT at the time of arrival of EMS personnel and a monitor/defibrillator.11 The vast majority of cardiac arrest survivors come from this group.1,2,4
Rhythm recognition
Ventricular fibrillation (VF)
VF is a pulseless, chaotic, disorganized rhythm characterized by an undulating, irregular pattern that varies in amplitude and morphology, with a ventricular waveform of more than 150/minute.1,2
Ventricular tachycardia (VT)
Pulseless VT is characterized by broad, bizarrely shaped ventricular complexes associated with no detectable cardiac output. The rate is more than 100/minute by definition, and is usually in excess of 150.1,2
Pulseless electrical activity (PEA) or electromechanical dissociation (EMD)
The absence of a detectable cardiac output in the presence of a coordinated electrical rhythm is called pulseless electrical activity (PEA), also known as electromechanical dissociation (EMD).1,2
Asystole
Defibrillation
The only proven effective treatment for VF and pulseless VT is electrical defibrillation.1,2,10,12 The defibrillator must be brought immediately to the side of the person in cardiac arrest and, if the rhythm is VF/VT, defibrillation attempted without delay.
Placement of pads or paddles
Pads or paddles are often identified as ‘sternum’ and ‘apex’, or ‘anterior’ and ‘posterior’, which is of no relevance for emergency transthoracic defibrillation. It simply allows detection by the pads/paddles of the correct orientation of certain perfusing cardiac rhythms prior to synchronized cardioversion.1,2,11,12,13
Anteroposterior pad or paddle position
An alternative is the anteroposterior position: the anterior pad/paddle is placed over the praecordium or apex, and the posterior pad/paddle is placed on the patient’s back in the left or right infrascapular region.
Do not attempt defibrillation over ECG electrodes or medicated patches, and avoid placing pad/paddles over significant breast tissue in females. Also the pad/paddles should be placed at least 12–15 cm away from the module and pulse generator, if the patient has respectively an implanted pacemaker or a cardioverter–defibrillator. Arrange to check the function of any pacemaker or cardioverter–defibrillator as soon as practicable after successful defibrillation.1,2,11,12