| Literature DB >> 26521230 |
Thomas Wurmb1, Tina Vollmer2, Peter Sefrin3, Martin Kraus4, Oliver Happel5, Christian Wunder6, Andreas Steinisch7, Norbert Roewer8, Sebastian Maier9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with cardiac arrest have lower survival rates, when resuscitation performance is low. In In-hospital settings the first responders on scene are usually nursing staff without rhythm analysing skills. In such cases Automated External Defibrillators (AED) might help guiding resuscitation performance. At the Wuerzburg University Hospital (Germany) an AED-program was initiated in 2007. Aim of the presented study was to monitor the impact of Automated External Defibrillators on the management of in-hospital cardiac arrest events.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26521230 PMCID: PMC4628300 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-015-0170-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Contents of the questionnaire
| How was the emergency detected? | |
| Observed? | |
| Unobserved? | |
| Detected by patients monitor? | |
| CPR interruption in order to call the MET? | |
| Yes | |
| No | |
| Take Over FRT/MET | |
| ROSC? | |
| Continuation of CPR? | |
| Continuation of AED-use? | |
| Change to full-scale-defibrillator? | |
| Change of AED electrode-paddles? | |
| Outcome? | |
| ROSC | |
| Transfer to ICU under CPR | |
| Death on scene | |
| User satisfaction with the AED (Grades 1–6 (1 = best))? | |
| General Handling (Grades 1–6 (1 = best)) | |
| Quality of the online feed back system (Grades 1–6 (1 = best)) | |
| General value of the AED in the CPR-setting (Grades 1–6 (1 = best)) | |
| User satisfaction with the emergency trolley (Grades 1–6 (1 = best))? | |
| Equipement (Grades 1–6 (1 = best)) | |
| Clarity (Grades 1–6 (1 = best)) | |
| Accesability (Grades 1–6 (1 = best)) |
MET Medical Emergency Team, FRT First Responder Team, ROSC Return of Spontaneous Circulation, AED Automated External Defibrillator, ICU Intensive Care Unit, CPR Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation
Fig. 1Exclusion process
Time intervals and no flow fraction
| Time interval from AED-activation to the first compression detected by the AED (TtC) ( | 34 (32–52) seconds |
| No flow fraction (NFF) ( | 41 % |
| Time interval from AED-activation to the first shock (TtS) ( | 30 (28–32) seconds |
| Time from shock to the first compression after shock (TtCS) ( | 4 (3–6) seconds |
IQR = Inter Quartile Range
Frequencies of primary rhythms
| Asystole |
|
| Ventricular Fibrillation |
|
| Ventricular Tachycardia |
|
| Pulseless Electrical Activity |
|
| Bradycardia (<30 beats/min) |
|
| Pulseless Tachycardia (>150 beats/min) |
|
| Others |
|
Fig. 2User evaluation of the AED (grades from German scholar system; 1 = excellent, 6 = insufficient)
Fig. 3User evaluation of the Emergency Trolley (grades from German scholar system; 1 = excellent, 6 = insufficient)