| Literature DB >> 30111343 |
Christopher Newell1, Scott Grier1, Jasmeet Soar2.
Abstract
After cardiac arrest a combination of basic and advanced airway and ventilation techniques are used during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and after a return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). The optimal combination of airway techniques, oxygenation and ventilation is uncertain. Current guidelines are based predominantly on evidence from observational studies and expert consensus; recent and ongoing randomised controlled trials should provide further information. This narrative review describes the current evidence, including the relative roles of basic and advanced (supraglottic airways and tracheal intubation) airways, oxygenation and ventilation targets during CPR and after ROSC in adults. Current evidence supports a stepwise approach to airway management based on patient factors, rescuer skills and the stage of resuscitation. During CPR, rescuers should provide the maximum feasible inspired oxygen and use waveform capnography once an advanced airway is in place. After ROSC, rescuers should titrate inspired oxygen and ventilation to achieve normal oxygen and carbon dioxide targets.Entities:
Keywords: Airway; Cardiac arrest; Cardiopulmonary resuscitation; Oxygenation; Ventilation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30111343 PMCID: PMC6092791 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-018-2121-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Stepwise approach to airway management during cardiopulmonary resuscitation
Randomised controlled trials in progress
| Title | Country | Summary | Current status | Registration number | Links |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AIRWAYS-2 | United Kingdom | Cluster randomised trial comparing tracheal intubation with supraglottic airway (i-gel) insertion as the initial airway in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. | Enrolment completed August 2017 | ISRCTN08256118 |
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| Pragmatic Airway Resuscitation Trial (PART) [ | United States of America | Cluster randomised trial comparing tracheal intubation and laryngeal tube insertion in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. | Enrolment completed 2017 | NCT02419573 |
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| Reduction of oxygen after cardiac arrest: The EXACT trial | Australia | Phase 3 Randomised controlled trial comparing oxygen titrated to saturations of 90–94% with 98–100% as soon as possible after ROSC and continued until ICU admission. | Enrolment starts October 2017 | NCT03138005 |
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| Targeted therapeutic mild hypercapnia after resuscitated cardiac arrest (TAME) | Australia | Randomised controlled trial comparing mild hypercapnia (PaCO2 50–55 mmHg) with targeted normocapnia (PaCO235–45 mmHg). | Enrolment starts December 2017 | NCT03114033 |
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| Targeting low- or high-normal Carbon dioxide, Oxygen, and Mean arterial pressure After Cardiac Arrest and REsuscitation: study protocol for a randomised pilot trial [ | Finland | Feasibility study | Enrolment complete | NCT02698917 |
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