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When is It Futile for Ambulance Personnel to Initiate Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation?

Overview
Journal BMJ
Specialty General Medicine
Date 1995 Jul 1
PMID 7613330
Citations 11
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Objective: To determine whether patients with unexpected prehospital cardiac arrest could be identified in whom ambulance resuscitation attempts would be futile.

Design: Review of ambulance and hospital records; detailed review of automated external defibrillator rhythm strips of patients in whom no shock was advised.

Setting: Scottish Ambulance Service; all cardiopulmonary resuscitation attempts after cardiorespiratory arrest during 1988-94 included in the Heartstart Scotland database.

Subject: 414 cardiorespiratory arrest patients with no pulse or breathing on arrival of ambulance personnel, no bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed, and more than 15 minutes from time of arrest to arrival of ambulance. Patients were stratified into those with "shockable" and "non-shockable" rhythms.

Main Outcome Measures: Return of spontaneous circulation, or survival to reach hospital alive, or survival to discharge, or all three.

Results: No patient with a non-shockable rhythm who met the entry criteria for analysis survived a resuscitation attempt. Review of the defibrillator rhythm strips of these patients failed to find any case in which the tracing was deemed compatible with survival.

Conclusion: On the basis that it would be inappropriate to initiate vigorous resuscitation in patients who can be identified as "dead" and beyond help an algorithm was prepared to guide ambulance personnel.

Citing Articles

Termination of Resuscitation Rules and Survival Among Patients With Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

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The predictive performance of current termination-of-resuscitation rules in patients following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Asian countries: A cross-sectional multicentre study.

Hsu S, Sun J, Huang E, Nishiuchi T, Song K, Leong B PLoS One. 2022; 17(8):e0270986.

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Predictive performances of ALS and BLS termination of resuscitation rules in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest for different resuscitation protocols.

Lin Y, Lai Y, Chang H, Lu C, Chiu P, Kuo Y BMC Emerg Med. 2022; 22(1):53.

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Association Between Duration of Resuscitation and Favorable Outcome After Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: Implications for Prolonging or Terminating Resuscitation.

Reynolds J, Grunau B, Rittenberger J, Sawyer K, Kurz M, Callaway C Circulation. 2016; 134(25):2084-2094.

PMID: 27760796 PMC: 5173423. DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.116.023309.


The scene time interval and basic life support termination of resuscitation rule in adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

Kim T, Shin S, Kim Y, Kim C, Kim J J Korean Med Sci. 2015; 30(1):104-9.

PMID: 25552890 PMC: 4278016. DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2015.30.1.104.


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