| Literature DB >> 29364925 |
Chunshuang Wu1, Zhongjun Zheng1, Libing Jiang1, Yuzhi Gao1, Jiefeng Xu1, Xiaohong Jin1, Qijiang Chen1, Mao Zhang1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prognosis of pulseless electrical activity is dismal. However, it is still challengable to decide when to terminate or continue resuscitation efforts. The aim of this study was to determine whether the use of bedside ultrasound (US) could predict the restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in patients with pulseless electrical activity (PEA) through the identification of cardiac activity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29364925 PMCID: PMC5783414 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0191636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The flowchart of the selection process.
Characteristics of the 11 studies included in a systematic review and diagnostic accuracy meta-analysis.
| Study ID | Study setting | Study location | Study scene | Mean age (years) | Sample size (n) | Patients’ characteristics | US views | US operators’ experience | The time US was performed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aichinger 2012 | Unknown | Austria | Pre-hospital | 70.3 | 11 | Non-traumatic | Subxiphoid | A 2-h course in echocardiography | During a rhythm and pulse check |
| Blaivas 2001 | Single | USA | In-hospital | 71 | 38 | Non-traumatic | Subxiphoid; if unable to obtain, use parasternal views | Ultrasound trained and credentialed | The duration of the pulse check |
| Breitkreutz 2010 | Single | Germany | Pre-hospital | 65±15 | 51 | Both | One of three views | Having undergone the standard FEER training program | During an ALS-conformed interruption of CPR |
| Flato 2015 | Single | Brazil | In-hospital | 59.75±18.11 | 32 | Both | Various views | Had a 60-min lecture on ALS-conformed-TTE | During the intervals for rhythm check for 10s |
| Chardoli 2012 | Multicenter | Iran | In-hospital | 58±6.1 | 50 | Both | Subxiphoid | Attended a teaching course to performing echocardiography | Just in the first NFI |
| Salen 2001 | Multicenter | USA | In-hospital | Unknown | 55 | Non-traumatic | Subxiphoid view; the apical view as an adjunct in obese patients | Received a 4-h trauma sonography course | During the pulse check pause of the ALS |
| Salen 2005 | Multicenter | USA | Pre-hospital/in-hospital | 16–94 | 34 | Non-traumatic | Subxiphoid or parasternal | Physician sonographers | Examinations during the pulse check |
| Tayal 2003 | Single | USA | In-hospital | 57±15 | 20 | Non-traumatic | Various views | Trained with a 20-h ultrasound course | During CPR |
| Gaspari 2016 | Multicenter | USA and Canada | In-hospital | 64.2±17.4 | 414 | Non-traumatic | Subxyphoid or parasternal long axis views | Emergency physician’s credentialed in bedside ultrasound by their individual hospitals | During pauses in resuscitation |
| Kim 2016 | Single | Korea | Pre-hospital | 63.9±14.5 | 8 | Non-traumatic | Subcostal or parasternal window | The senior emergency resident or emergency specialist who had≥3 years’experience in emergency echocardiography | During pulse checks |
| Tomruk 2012 | Single | Turkey | In-hospital | 61.6±17.9 | 64 | Both | Subxiphoid cardiac approach | Theoretical and hands-on training in cardiac ultrasonography | During the initial assessment |
PEA, pulseless electrical activity; ROSC, restoration of spontaneous circulation which was defined as a return of spontaneous circulation for ≥20 mins or ROSC upon hospital admission; US, ultrasound; ALS, advanced life support; NFI, no flow interval; TTE, transthoracic echocardiography; in-hospital indicates that bedside ultrasound was not used until arrival at hospital; pre-hospital indicates that ultrasound was used at the scene; Unknown, the data was unable to be obtained; FEER, focused echocardiographic evaluation in resuscitation; CPR, cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Assessment of the quality of the eleven studies.
| Aichinger 2012(9) | Blaivas 2001(10) | Breitkreutz 2010(11) | Flato 2015(13) | Chardoli 2012(12) | Salen 2001(16) | Salen 2005(4) | Tayal 2003(17) | Gaspari 2016(14) | Kim 2016(15) | Tomruk 2012(18) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Representativeness of the exposed cohort | |||||||||||
| Selection of the nonexposed cohort | |||||||||||
| Ascertainment of exposure | |||||||||||
| Demonstration that outcome of interest was not present at start of study | |||||||||||
| Comparability of cohorts on the basis of the design or analysis | - | - | - | - | - | - | |||||
| Assessement of outcome | |||||||||||
| Was follow-up long enough for outcomes to occur | |||||||||||
| Adequacy of follow up of cohort |
*: One star
**: Two stars.
Fig 2Forest plot of the pooling effects of cardiac activity on the restoration of spontaneous circulation.
Pulseless electrical activity (PEA) can be sub-divided into pseudo-PEA and true-PEA according to the cardiac contraction or cardiac standstill on ultrasound (US).
Fig 3Forest plot of the subgroup analysis of cardiac activity on the restoration of spontaneous circulation.
(a) studies whose sample size was n<50; (b) studies whose sample size was n≥50.
Fig 4Forest plot of the subgroup analysis of cardiac activity on the restoration of spontaneous circulation.
(a) studies whose ultrasound evaluation occurred pre-hospital; (b) studies whose ultrasound evaluation occurred in-hospital.
Fig 5Forest plot of the subgroup analysis of cardiac activity on the restoration of spontaneous circulation.
(a) studies whose ultrasound evaluation focused only on the subxiphoid; (b) studies whose ultrasound evaluation used various views.