Sudden death from cardiac causes, often due to ventricular fibrillation, claims at least 250,000 persons annually in the United States.
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The American Heart Association guidelines for advanced ...cardiac life support state that antiarrhythmic medications are “acceptable, probably helpful” for the treatment of ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia that persists after three or more shocks from an external defibrillator (often called “shock-refractory” ventricular fibrillation or tachycardia).
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This guarded recommendation reflects the limited evidence supporting the use of these agents, none of which have been convincingly demonstrated to improve the success of attempted resuscitation after cardiac arrest.
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We conducted . . .
CONTEXT Use of automated external defibrillators (AEDs) by
first arriving emergency medical technicians (EMTs) is advocated to
improve the outcome for out-of-hospital ventricular fibrillation (VF).
...However, adding AEDs to the emergency medical system in Seattle, Wash,
did not improve survival. Studies in animals have shown improved
outcomes when cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was administered
prior to an initial shock for VF of several minutes' duration. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of providing 90 seconds of CPR
to persons with out-of-hospital VF prior to delivery of a shock by
first-arriving EMTs. DESIGN Observational, prospectively defined, population-based
study with 42 months of preintervention analysis (July 1, 1990-December
31, 1993) and 36 months of postintervention analysis (January 1,
1994-December 31, 1996). SETTING Seattle fire department–based, 2-tiered emergency medical
system. PARTICIPANTS A total of 639 patients treated for out-of-hospital
VF before the intervention and 478 after the intervention. INTERVENTION Modification of the protocol for use of AEDs,
emphasizing approximately 90 seconds of CPR prior to delivery of a
shock. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Survival and neurologic status at hospital
discharge determined by retrospective chart review as a function of
early (<4 minutes) and later (≥4 minutes) response intervals. RESULTS Survival improved from 24% (155/639) to 30% (142/478)
(P=.04). That benefit was predominantly in
patients for whom the initial response interval was 4 minutes or longer
(survival, 17% 56/321 before vs 27% 60/220 after;
P = .01). In a multivariate logistic model, adjusting for
differences in patient and resuscitation factors between the periods,
the protocol intervention was estimated to improve survival
significantly (odds ratio, 1.42; 95% confidence interval, 1.07-1.90;
P = .02). Overall, the proportion of victims who survived
with favorable neurologic recovery increased from 17% (106/634) to
23% (109/474) (P = .01). Among survivors, the proportion
having favorable neurologic function at hospital discharge increased
from 71% (106/150) to 79% (109/138) (P<.11). CONCLUSION The routine provision of approximately 90 seconds of
CPR prior to use of AED was associated with increased survival when
response intervals were 4 minutes or longer.
To evaluate the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of interventions aimed at improving neurologic outcome after cardiac arrest.
The authors conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized ...clinical trial with factorial design to see if magnesium, diazepam, or both, when given immediately following resuscitation from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, would increase the proportion of patients awakening, defined as following commands or having comprehensible speech. If the patient regained a systolic blood pressure of at least 90 mm Hg and had not awakened, paramedics injected IV two syringes stored in a sealed kit. The first always contained either 2 g magnesium sulfate (M) or placebo (P); the second contained either 10 mg diazepam (D) or P. Awakening at any time by 3 months was determined by record review, and independence at 3 months was determined by telephone calls. Over 30 months, 300 patients were randomized in balanced blocks of 4, 75 each to MD, MP, PD, or PP. The study was conducted under waiver of consent.
Despite the design, the four treatment groups differed on baseline variables collected before randomization. Percent awake by 3 months for each group were: MD, 29.3%; MP, 46.7%; PD, 30.7%; PP, 37.3%. Percent independent at 3 months were: MD, 17.3%; MP, 34.7%; PD, 17.3%; PP, 25.3%. Significant interactions were lacking. After adjusting for baseline imbalances, none of these differences was significant, and no adverse effects were identified.
Neither magnesium nor diazepam significantly improved neurologic outcome from cardiac arrest.
CONTEXT Recent reports from 2 European cities and an earlier observation from
Seattle, Wash, suggest that the number of patients treated for out-of-hospital
ventricular fibrillation (VF) has ...declined. OBJECTIVE To analyze the incidence of cardiac arrest and to examine relationships
among incidence, sex, race, age, and first identified cardiac rhythm in Seattle. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS Population-based study of all cardiac arrest cases with presumed cardiac
etiology who received advanced life support from Seattle Fire Department emergency
medical services during specified periods between 1979 and 2000. United States
Census data for Seattle in 1980, 1990, and 2000 were used to determine incidence
rates for treated cardiac arrest with adjustments for age and sex. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Changes in incidence of cardiac arrest and initial recorded cardiac
rhythm. RESULTS The adjusted annual incidence of cardiac arrest with VF as the first
identified rhythm decreased by about 56% from 1980 to 2000 (from 0.85 to 0.38
per 1000; relative risk RR, 0.44; 95% confidence interval CI, 0.37-0.53).
Similar reductions occurred in blacks (54%; RR, 0.45; 95% CI, 0.26-0.79) and
whites (53%; RR, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.38-0.58) and was most evident in men (57%;
RR, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.35-0.53), in whom the baseline incidence was relatively
high. When all treated arrests with presumed cardiac etiology were considered,
that incidence decreased by 43% (RR, 0.58; 95% CI, 0.49-0.67) in men but negligibly
in women, for whom a relatively low incidence of VF also declined but was
offset by more cases with asystole or pulseless electrical activity. CONCLUSION We observed a major decline in the incidence of out-of-hospital VF and
in all cases of treated cardiac arrest presumably due to heart disease in
Seattle. These changes likely reflect the national decline in coronary heart
disease mortality.
To determine whether a brief session of behavior change counseling (BCC), offered to injured adolescents in the emergency department (ED) as a therapeutic intervention, could be used to change ...injury-related risk behaviors and the risk of reinjury.
A randomized, controlled trial.
Adolescents between 12 and 20 years old who were undergoing treatment for an injury in the ED and who were cognitively able to participate in the intervention.
An urban ED at a level 1 pediatric trauma center.
Study participants completed a baseline risk behavior prevalence assessment. Participants were then randomly assigned to receive BCC or routine ED care. Those in the treatment group underwent a brief session of BCC with a study social worker focused on changing an identified injury-related risk behavior (seatbelt use, bicycle helmet use, driving after drinking, riding with an impaired driver, binge drinking, or carrying a weapon). Participants were recontacted 3 months and 6 months after enrollment to assess the prevalence of positive behavior change and the interim occurrence of medically treated injuries.
We enrolled 631 participants (78% of those eligible) and obtained follow-up for 76% at 3 months and 75% at 6 months. The relative risk of a positive behavior change with respect to seatbelt use was 1.34 (95% confidence interval CI: 1.00, 1.79) at 3 months, favoring the intervention group. The relative risk for the same outcome was 1.47 (95% CI: 1.09, 1.96) at 6 months. A positive change in bicycle helmet use was 1.81 (95% CI: 1.02, 3.18) times more likely at 3 months and 2.00 (95% CI: 1.00, 4.00) times more likely at 6 months in the intervention group. There was no effect of the intervention on changes in other target behaviors. Over the 6-month follow-up period, the risk of reinjury requiring medical attention did not differ between treatment groups.
Brief BCC can be delivered to adolescents undergoing treatment for injury in the ED and can be used to address injury-related risk behaviors. The intervention was associated with a greater likelihood of positive behavior change in seatbelt and bicycle helmet use. This effect lasted over 6 months of follow-up. BCC was not associated with changes in other risk behaviors and could not be shown to significantly reduce the risk of reinjury.
Unexpected findings from the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial, a trial of the primary prevention of coronary heart disease, suggested that treating hypertension with high doses of thiazide ...diuretic drugs might increase the risk of sudden death from cardiac causes
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. Meta-analyses of clinical trials evaluating the treatment of hypertensive patients with high doses of a thiazide suggest a reduction of 8 to 12 percent in mortality from coronary heart disease -- substantially less than the reduction of 20 to 25 percent predicted in epidemiologic studies
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. In recent clinical trials, in contrast, the treatment of hypertensive patients . . .
Cardiac arrest is the leading cause of death among dialysis patients in the United States. We measured the outcome of cardiac arrests attended by Emergency Medical Services (EMS) staff at ...hemodialysis facilities in a 14-year population-based retrospective study to identify cardiac arrest cases at a dialysis unit. Associated factors were determined using unconditional logistic regression. Of the 102 cardiac arrests identified around the time of dialysis, 10 occurred before, 72 during, and 20 after hemodialysis. The initial measured abnormality was ventricular fibrillation or tachycardia in 72 cases. Of those who survived transportation to a hospital, survival to discharge was 24 with 15% survival at 1 year. Compared to arrests that occurred prior to dialysis, the odds of ventricular fibrillation were 5-fold greater in patients on dialysis but 14-fold greater in those arresting after dialysis. One-third of cases occurred after the introduction of automated external defibrillators, and in half of the cases these devices were attached prior to EMS arrival. Once these devices were attached, most were used for defibrillation. We conclude that ventricular arrhythmias are the predominant features among arrested in-center dialysis patients with most occurrences during dialysis. The role of these devices in dialysis units will need a larger study to evaluate their efficacy.
Whether the dietary intake of long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) from seafood reduces the risk of ischemic heart disease remains a source of controversy, in part because studies have ...yielded inconsistent findings. Results from experimental studies in animals suggest that recent dietary intake of long-chain n-3 PUFAs, compared with saturated and monounsaturated fats, reduces vulnerability to ventricular fibrillation, a life-threatening cardiac arrhythmia that is a major cause of ischemic heart disease mortality. Until recently, whether a similar effect of long-chain n-3 PUFAs from seafood occurred in humans was unknown. We summarize the findings from a population-based case-control study that showed that the dietary intake of long-chain n-3 PUFAs from seafood, measured both directly with a questionnaire and indirectly with a biomarker, is associated with a reduced risk of primary cardiac arrest in humans. The findings also suggest that 1) compared with no seafood intake, modest dietary intake of long-chain n-3 PUFAs from seafood (equivalent to 1 fatty fish meal/wk) is associated with a reduction in the risk of primary cardiac arrest; 2) compared with modest intake, higher intakes of these fatty acids are not associated with a further reduction in such risk; and 3) the reduced risk of primary cardiac arrest may be mediated, at least in part, by the effect of dietary n-3 PUFA intake on cell membrane fatty acid composition. These findings also may help to explain the apparent inconsistencies in earlier studies of long-chain n-3 PUFA intake and ischemic heart disease.
Despite reports of patients with resuscitated sudden cardiac arrest (rSCA) receiving acute cardiac catheterization, the efficacy of this strategy is largely unknown. We hypothesized that acute ...cardiac catheterization of patients with rSCA would improve survival to hospital discharge. A retrospective cohort of 240 patients with out-of-hospital rSCA caused by ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation was identified from 11 institutions in Seattle, Washington from 1999 through 2002. Patients were grouped into those receiving acute catheterization within 6 hours (≤6-hour group, n = 61) and those with deferred catheterization at >6 hours or no catheterization during the index hospitalization (>6-hour group, n = 179). Attention was directed to survival to hospital discharge, neurologic status, extent of coronary artery disease, presenting electrocardiographic findings, and symptoms before arrest. Propensity-score methods were used to adjust for the likelihood of receiving acute catheterization. Survival was greater in patients who underwent acute catheterization (72% in the ≤6-hour group vs 49% in the >6-hour group, p = 0.001). Percutaneous coronary intervention was performed in 38 of 61 patients (62%) in the ≤6-hour group and 13 of 170 patients (7%) in the >6-hour group (p <0.0001). Neurologic status was similar in the 2 groups. A significantly larger percentage of patients in the acute catheterization group had symptoms before cardiac arrest and had ST-segment elevation on electrocardiogram after resuscitation. Age, bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation, daytime presentation, history of percutaneous coronary intervention or stroke, and acute ST-segment elevation were positively associated with receiving cardiac catheterization. In conclusion, in this series of patients who sustained out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, acute catheterization (<6 hours of presentation) was associated with improved survival.
We examined the effects of summer warmth on leaf area index (LAI), total aboveground phytomass (TAP), and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) across the Arctic bioclimate zone in Alaska and ...extrapolated our results to the circumpolar Arctic. Phytomass, LAI, and within homogeneous areas of vegetation on acidic and nonacidic soils were regressed against the total summer warmth index (SWI) at 12 climate stations in northern Alaska (SWI = sum of mean monthly temperatures greater than 0°C). SWI varies from 9°C at Barrow to 37°C at Happy Valley. A 5°C increase in the SWI is correlated with about a 120 g m−2 increase in the aboveground phytomass for zonal vegetation on acidic sites and about 60 g m−2 on nonacidic sites. Shrubs account for most of the increase on acidic substrates, whereas mosses account for most of the increase on nonacidic soils. LAI is positively correlated with SWI on acidic sites but not on nonacidic sites. The NDVI is positively correlated with SWI on both acidic and nonacidic soils, but the NDVI on nonacidic parent material is consistently lower than the NDVI on acidic substrates. Extrapolation to the whole Arctic using a five‐subzone zonation approach to stratify the circumpolar NDVI and phytomass data showed that 60% of the aboveground phytomass is concentrated in the low‐shrub tundra (subzone 5), whereas the high Arctic (subzones 1–3) has only 9% of the total. Estimated phytomass densities in subzones 1–5 are 47, 256, 102, 454, and 791 g m−2, respectively. Climate warming will likely result in increased phytomass, LAI, and NDVI on zonal sites. These changes will be most noticeable in acidic areas with abundant shrub phytomass.