| Literature DB >> 31889224 |
Laila Hussein1, Mohammad Anzal Rehman2, Ruhina Sajid3, Firas Annajjar4, Tarik Al-Janabi4.
Abstract
Patients with cardiac arrest present as a relatively frequent occurrence in the Emergency Department. Despite the advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of cardiac arrest, managing the condition remains a stressful endeavor and currently implemented interventions, while beneficial, are still associated with a disappointingly low survivability. The majority of modern Advanced Life Support algorithms employ a standardized approach to best resuscitate the 'crashed' patient. However, management during resuscitation often encourages a 'one-size-fits-all' policy for most patients, with lesser attention drawn towards causality of the disease and factors that could alter resuscitative care. Life support providers are also often challenged by the limited bedside predictors of survival to guide the course and duration of resuscitation. Over the recent decades, point-of-care ultrasonography (PoCUS) has been gradually proving itself as a useful adjunct that could potentially bridge the gap in the recognition and evaluation of precipitants and end-points in resuscitation, thereby facilitating an improved approach to resuscitation of the arrested patient. Point-of-care ultrasound applications in the critical care field have tremendously evolved over the past four decades. Today, bedside ultrasound is a fundamental tool that is quick, safe, inexpensive and reproducible. Not only can it provide the physician with critical information on reversible causes of arrest, but it can also be used to predict survival. Of note is its utility in predicting worse survival outcomes in patients with cardiac standstill, i.e., no cardiac activity witnessed with ultrasound. Unfortunately, despite the increasing evidence surrounding ultrasound use in arrest, bedside ultrasound is still largely underutilized during the resuscitation process. This article reviews the current literature on cardiac standstill and the application of bedside ultrasound in cardiac arrests.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; Cardiac standstill; Echocardiography; Point-of-care ultrasound; Predictors of survival in cardiac arrest; Resuscitation; Transesophageal echocardiography; Ultrasound
Year: 2019 PMID: 31889224 PMCID: PMC6937355 DOI: 10.1186/s13089-019-0150-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ultrasound J ISSN: 2524-8987
Fig. 1The Cardiac Arrest Sonographic Assessment (CASA) protocol. Reproduced with author’s permission from the original algorithm curtesy of Gardner et al. [26]
Fig. 2Subcostal views of the heart taken while chest compressions were ongoing. a The heart was compressed (systole) and chambers are difficult identify. b The hands are off the chest and the right (RV) and left (LV) ventricles are seen clearly
Fig. 3M-mode of the heart in asystole. a The horizontal lines represent absence of any movement across the M-mode line. Areas which are grainy (arrows) indicate myocardial contraction. b Completely flat lines indicating no cardiac movement (true cardiac standstill)
Key points in faster image acquisition during CPR
| Minimizing compression interruptions |
|---|
| Establish high-quality CPR |
| Presence of at least 2 physicians in the code |
| The most experienced user should scan |
| Get ready with a towel in your hand |
| Choose your probe and presets ahead |
| Acquire images before the pulse check |
| Have someone do a 10-s count down |
| Only 1 window per pulse check |
| Record your scan and review later |
Fig. 4Parasternal view of the lungs in M-mode showing sea shore appearance that confirms absence of pneumothorax