| Literature DB >> 32944342 |
Joshua D Stearns1, Jaffalie Twaibu2, Dzifa Kwaku2, Vincent Pizziconi2, James Abbas2, Ashwini Gotimukul3, Dawn E Jaroszewski3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Nuss procedure temporarily places intrathoracic bars for repair of pectus excavatum (PE). The bars may impact excursion and compliance of the anterior chest wall while in place. Effective chest compressions during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) require depressing the anterior chest wall enough to compress the heart between sternum and spine. We assessed the force required to perform the American Heart Association's recommended chest compression depth after Nuss repair.Entities:
Keywords: Funnel chest/surgery; cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)/education; cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)/methods; pectus excavatum (PE)
Year: 2020 PMID: 32944342 PMCID: PMC7475523 DOI: 10.21037/jtd-20-702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thorac Dis ISSN: 2072-1439 Impact factor: 2.895
Figure 1Drawing of the intrathoracic placement of Nuss bars for repair of pectus excavatum deformity.
Figure 2Preoperative and postoperative images with severe pectus excavatum deformity who underwent Nuss procedure. (A) Magnetic resonance imaging shows a 23-year-old male with severe pectus excavatum deformity (Haller Index >8) with the anterior wall depressed inward; (B) preoperative and (C) postoperative photographs of patient; (D) chest roentgenogram postoperative with 2 Nuss bars in place after excavatum repair.
Figure 3Lumped element elastic model showing elasticity configuration of the chest relative to Nuss bar(s).
Figure 4Graph showing how the required compressive force would increase to achieve recommended compression depth due to the presence of Nuss bar(s).
Summary of how the presence of Nuss bar(s) affect chest displacement and required compression pressure during standard CPR
| Simulated chest condition | Displacement from 740 N | Displacement | Force required to achieve 5 cm depth (N) | Required compression force increase (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chest only | 5.0 | * | 738 | * |
| Chest with 1 Nuss bar | 1.5 | 69 | 2,413 | 226 |
| Chest with 2 Nuss bars | 0.9 | 82 | 4,088 | 453 |
| Chest with 3 Nuss bars | 0.6 | 87 | 5,762 | 680 |
*, indicates baseline condition used for calculation of percent change. CPR, cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Figure 5Graph showing how the presence of Nuss bar(s) affects chest response to compressive forces during standard CPR. CPR, cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Case reports of cardiac arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation in patients with Nuss bars
| Author, year | Patient age, sex | Information on bars | Location of cardiac arrest | Outcomes | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glithero, 2019, ( | 17-year-old male | 1 Nuss bar (initially 2 bars placed but upper removed due to rotation) at time of CPR; length 13 inches | Out-of-hospital | Successful CPR | Documented ventricular fibrillation, compressions with single shock delivered; followed by return of spontaneous circulation |
| Zou, 2017, ( | 18-year-old male | 1 Nuss bar; length 16 inches | Intra-operative | Successful CPR | Documented ventricular fibrillation with CPR; Consistent CPR and 3 rounds of electrical defibrillation failed to convert patient; Nuss bar removed and patient successfully cardioverted; Patient may have had coronary-to-pulmonary arterial shunts |
| Nakahara, 2015, ( | 13-year-old male | 2 Nuss bars; length unknown | Out-of-hospital | Death | CPR with single shock defibrillation performed for 6 minutes by bystanders until paramedics arrived; Patient confirmed asystole; Death confirmed 1 hour after onset; autopsy revealed abnormal origin of the right coronary artery and evidence for right heart failure |
| Zoeller, 2005, ( | 21-year-old male | 1 Nuss bar; length 15 inches | Out-of-hospital | Death | Documented ventricular fibrillation with CPR attempted and no response to defibrillation; Pronounced dead after arrival to ER in asystole; paramedics reported being only able to obtain weak pulse with CPR secondary to substernal bar |
CPR, cardiopulmonary resuscitation.