| Literature DB >> 31112576 |
Mikako Shinchi1, Masanao Kobayashi2, Kaori Soma1, Akifumi Maeda1.
Abstract
The optimal strategy to ensure chest compression quality for patients being transported on a stretcher has not been established yet. We hypothesised that straddling cardiopulmonary resuscitation may improve chest compression quality in patients being transported on stretchers. We conducted a prospective randomised crossover study using manikins to investigate whether straddling cardiopulmonary resuscitation improves chest compression quality (depth, recoil, rate, correct hand position) performed on patients during stretcher transportation compared to walking cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Walking and straddling cardiopulmonary resuscitation were performed for 2 minutes each. The mean chest compression depth (mm) for 2 minutes was significantly greater in the straddling cardiopulmonary resuscitation group than in the walking cardiopulmonary resuscitation group (median, 51.3 [interquartile range, 46.7-55.5] versus 40.9 [34.6-50.1], P = 0.003). An adequate depth of chest compressions could not be achieved when walking cardiopulmonary resuscitation was performed by female participants, but the depth of chest compressions was within the acceptable range when female participants performed straddling cardiopulmonary resuscitation. On the other hand, the degree of deterioration was relatively small in male participants, even when they performed walking cardiopulmonary resuscitation. In patients with cardiac arrest being transported on a stretcher, straddling cardiopulmonary resuscitation improved the depth of chest compressions compared to walking cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Female rescuers, in particular, may consider using straddling cardiopulmonary resuscitation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31112576 PMCID: PMC6528974 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0216739
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Study protocol and flow diagram.
Flow diagram illustrating inclusion and exclusion criteria of participants in the randomised crossover study.
Characteristics of study participants.
| Walking CPR | Straddling CPR | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age—years, median [IQR | 36 [28–41.8] | - | |
| Sex—no. [male participants : female participants] | 10 : 10 | 1.00* | |
| Participants—occupation [doctor : nurse] | 9:11 | 1.00* | |
| Height—cm, median [IQR | 164 [157.3–173] | - | |
| Weight—kg, median [IQR | 64 [56.5–68.8] | - | |
| Body mass index—kg/cm2, median [IQR | 22.9 [20.7–24.7] | - | |
| Stretcher’s height—cm, median [IQR | 51.3 [50–53] | - | |
| Moving speed—m/min, median [IQR | 70 [70–70] | 70 [70–70.4] | 0.036 |
| Time to first compression—sec, median [IQR | - | 4.0 [2.7–5.6] | - |
Medians [interquartile range (IQR), Q1: lower quartile (25th percentile)—Q3: upper quartile (75th percentile)]
Quality of chest compressions.
| Variable (main outcome) | Walking CPR | Straddling CPR | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean compression depth, mm | |||
| total 2 minutes | 40.9 [34.6–50.1] | 51.3 [46.7–55.5] | 0.003 |
| 1st period (0–30 seconds) | 46.3 [38.6–55.5] * | 55.6 [48–60.3] ** | 0.007 |
| 2nd period (30–60 seconds) | 42.1 [36.3–53.5] † | 52.1 [46.8–57.4] †† | 0.009 |
| 3rd period (60–90 seconds) | 35.8 [30.7–46.7] ‡ | 48.8 [44.6–53.7] ‡‡ | 0.001 |
| 4th period (90–120 seconds) | 35.8 [32.5–45.2] § | 46.4 [44.8–51.7] §§ | 0.001 |
| Mean compression rate, /min | 111.1 [110.7–113.1] | 110.8 [110.3–111.1] | 0.04 |
| Mean compression recoil (leaning depth), mm | 3.1 [1.1–4.8] | 4.9 [0.5–7.8] | 0.66 |
| Mean correct hand position in 2 min, % | 100 [100–100] | 100 [100–100] | 0.94 |
Walking CPR group vs straddling CPR group: Wilcoxon/Kruskal-Wallis tests (rank sums)
Comparison between inter-30’s section: Steel-Dwass test
Medians [interquartile range (IQR), Q1: lower quartile (25th percentile)—Q3: upper quartile (75th percentile)]
* vs †: p = 0.27, † vs ‡: p = 0.17, ‡ vs §: p = 0.94, * vs ‡: p = 0.011, † vs §: p = 0.12, * vs §: p = 0.007, ** vs ††: p = 0.49, †† vs ‡‡: p = 0.68, ‡‡ vs §§: p = 0.97, ** vs ‡‡: p = 0.07, †† vs §§: p = 0.129, ** vs §§: p = 0.016
Fig 2Time-dependent deterioration in mean compression depth by sex.
Walking CPR group vs straddling CPR group: Wilcoxon/Kruskal-Wallis tests (rank sums); Comparison between inter-30’s section: Steel-Dwass test Medians [interquartile range (IQR), Q1: lower quartile (25th percentile)—Q3: upper quartile (75th percentile)].
Time-dependent deterioration in percentage of participants achieving adequate compression depth by sex.
| Sex | Time period | % Adequate compression depth | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walking CPR | Straddling CPR | |||
| Male | total 2 minutes | 93.9 [76.0–99.3] | 100 [99.4–100] | 0.006 |
| 1st period (0–30 sec.) | 100 [82.5–100] * | 100 [99.6–100] ** | 0.42 | |
| 2nd period (30–60 sec.) | 100 [88.6–100] † | 100 [100–100] †† | 0.17 | |
| 3rd period (60–90 sec.) | 88.2 [64.6–100] ‡ | 100 [100–100] ‡‡ | 0.006 | |
| 4th period (90–120 sec.) | 88.3 [72.4–97.5] § | 100 [99.6–100] §§ | 0.002 | |
| Female | total 2 minutes | 30.8 [8.8–43.5] | 99.3 [92.4–100] | <0.001 |
| 1st period (0–30 sec.) | 82.8 [25–89.9] * | 100 [98.3–100] ** | <0.001 | |
| 2nd period (30–60 sec.) | 32.4 [1.4–64.3] † | 100 [95.5–100] †† | <0.001 | |
| 3rd period (60–90 sec.) | 1.8 [0–15.7] ‡ | 100 [83.5–100] ‡‡ | <0.001 | |
| 4th period (90–120 sec.) | 1.8 [0–6.5] § | 100 [87.6–100] §§ | <0.001 | |
% adequate compression depth: no. of adequate compressions depth/no. of total compressions
The definition of the adequate depth is ≥40 mm, according to the 2015 Resuscitation Council of Asia guidelines.
Walking CPR group vs straddling CPR group: Wilcoxon/Kruskal-Wallis tests (rank sums)
Comparison between inter-30’s section: Steel-Dwass test
Medians [interquartile range (IQR), Q1: lower quartile (25th percentile)—Q3: upper quartile (75th percentile)]
Men: * vs †: p = 1.00, † vs ‡: p = 0.49, ‡ vs §: p = 0.10, * vs ‡: p = 0.65, † vs §: p = 0.32, * vs §: p = 0.48, ** vs ††: p = 0.97, †† vs ‡‡: p = 1.00, ‡‡ vs §§: p = 1.00, ** vs ‡‡: p = 0.095, †† vs §§: p = 1.00, ** vs §§: p = 0.92
Women: * vs †: p = .032, † vs ‡: p = 0.35, ‡ vs §: p = 0.98, * vs ‡: p = 0.007, † vs §: p = 0.18, * vs §: p = 0.008, ** vs ††: p = 0.96, †† vs ‡‡: p = 1.00, ‡‡ vs §§: p = 1.00, ** vs ‡‡: p = 0.100, †† vs §§: p = 1.00, ** vs §§: p = 0.93