Lecture 1 Cardio-pulmonary Resusictation(some editions)

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

Transcript of Lecture 1 Cardio-pulmonary Resusictation(some editions)

Page 1: Lecture 1 Cardio-pulmonary Resusictation(some editions)

CARDIO-PULMONARYRESUSCITATION

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2005 AHA Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation

and Emergency Cardiac Care

2005 International Consensus Conference on Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care

Science With Treatment Recommandations and

ILCOR (International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation) 2005 CPR Consensus.

These recommendations replace or complete the 2000 CPR guidelines. published in Circulation - December 2005

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Grade 1 Randomized clinical studies or meta-analysis with significant therapeutic effects

Grade 2 Clinical studies with less significant therapeutic effects

Grade 3 Prospective controlled nonrandomized studies or case series

Grade 4 Retrospective nonrandomized studies

Grade 5 Uncontrolled case series

Grade 6 Experimental animal or mechanical studies

Grade 7 Theoretical analysis

Grade 8 Rationale and common practice without evidence base

Grading of evidence

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Hierarchy of recommendations depends upon risk/benefit ratio.

Class Risk/benefit ratio

I Benefit >>> risk

IIa Benefit >> risk

IIb benefit >/= risk

III risk >/= benefit

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

DEFINITIONS• Respiratory arrest = the absence of breathing movements.• Cardiac arrest = the clinical picture of overall cessation of circulation.• Clinical death = coma, apnea and pulselessness in large arteries with

cerebral failure still potentially reversible.• Biological death = the irreversible absence of body functions due to

irreversible structural cell damage.• Cerebral death = the irreversible absence of brain and brainstem functions

due to definitive neurological damage as a result of known pathological process.

• Persistent vegetative state = absence of motility and reaction to external stimuli due to persistent absence of cerebral activity with preservation of vegetative functions (respiration, circulation, swallowing).

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CARDIO-PULMONARY ARREST Physiopathology

respiratory arrest ? / cardiac arrest ?

• There are significant age-related differences in the incidence of primary respiratory arrest (more frequent in newborns and children) and primary cardiac arrest (more frequent in adults and old persons)

• There are significant differences between BLS in primary respiratory arrest and primary cardiac arrest.

understanding physiopathologyof cardio-pulmonary arrest

correct CPR

efficient CPR maneuvers

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RESPIRATORY ARREST• Pathophysiology

– Heart and lungs continue the tissue delivery of oxygenated blood until exhaustion of alveolar O2 reserves; pulse is present, altered consciousness;

– Delay to cardio-circulatory arrest: variable (seconds-minutes); it depends on:• Oxygen reserves in the moment of respiratory arrest (PAO2 and PaO2)• Myocardial capacity to sustain hypoxemia

– Uncorrected respiratory arrest results in cardiac arrest;• Causes

– Drowning, foreign body aspiration, toxic inhalation, epiglotitis, strangulation, etc.– Coma of any origin, stroke, etc.– Electrocution, trauma, etc.

• Clinical signs– Absence of breathing movements– Progressive cyanosis– Alterations of consciousness– Muscle hypotony

• Treatment– Artificial ventilation in order to oxygenate the blood and to prevent

secondary cardiac arrest

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CARDIAC ARREST• Pathophysiology– Cardiac arrest results in circulatory arrest with the immediate cessation of tissue O2 delivery;– Cessation of brain O2 delivery:

• Depletion of O2 reserves in 10 seconds• Depletion of phosphocreatine reserves in 2 minutes• Depletion of glucose and ATP reserves in 5 minutes

– For a short time delay (always seconds): agonic respiration (gasping) (inefficient respiratory efforts with recruitment of accessory respiratory muscles);

– Always cardiac arrest result in respiratory arrest;

• Causes– Myocardial infarction– Rhythm disturbances (myocardial infarction, myocardial ischemia electrolyte disturbances, etc.)– Hipovolemia (exsanguinations, politrauma)– Pulmonary embolism– Cardiac tamponada

• Clinical signs– Loss of consciousness (10 seconds; isoelectrical EEG in 15-30 seconds);– Agonic respirations or apnea (10-15 seconds)– Pulseless – Midriasis (30-60 seconds)– General aspect of “death”

• ECG signs– Ventricular fibrillation– Pulseless ventricular tachycardia – Pulseless electrical activitty– Asystoly

• Treatment– Artificial support for ventilation and circulation

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INDICATIONS of CPR:• Respiratory arrest • Cardiac arrest• Cardio-respiratory arrest

Primary/secondary - respiratory/cardiac arrest

CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

DEFINITION

= system of standard maneuvers, drugs and techniques indicated in case of cardio-respiratory arrest in order to artificially deliver the oxygenated blood to systemic circulatory beds at rates that are sufficient to preserve the vital organ function and at the same time providing the physiologic substrate for the return of spontaneous circulation.

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

FACTORS WHICH INFLUENCE THE RESULT OF RESUSCITATION:

Patient related factors:• The cause of cardio-respiratory arrest

• The functional status in the moment of cardio-respiratory arrest

• Co-existing diseases

Rescuer related factors:• Precocity of CPR

• Correctness of CPR

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

CHAIN OF SURVIVAL

BLS in <4 min ALS in <8 min

Earlyaccess

EarlyBLS

Early defibrillation

EarlyALS

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• “The most important determinant of survival from sudden cardiac arrest is the presence of a trained rescuer who is ready, willing, able, and equipped to act.”

(2005 AHA Guidelines for CPR and ECC, Circulation, 2005)

• “In the 1990s some predicted that cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) could be rendered obsolete by the widespread development of community automated external defibrillator (AED) programs. Cobb noted, however, as more Seatle first responders were equipped with AEDs, survival rates from sudden cardiac arrest fell. He attributed this decline to reduces emphasis on CPR....”

(2005 AHA Guidelines for CPR and ECC, Circulation, 2005)

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What means a successful cardio-pulmonary resuscitation?

Signs of successful CPR:

– return of spontaneous circulation

– hospital admission

– neurologic improvement

– hospital discharge

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATIONPhases of CPR:• Basic life support

– First phase of CPR;– Goals:

• Artificial delivery of oxygenated blood to systemic circulatory beds;• Prevention of irreversible brain damage;• Preservation of chances for successful resuscitation;• Return of spontaneous circulation;

– Provided without medical equipment (“with bare hands”);

• Advanced life support– The second/first phase of CPR;– Goals:

• Preservation of vital organ function;• Return of spontaneous circulation;• Post-resuscitation stabilization;• Cerebral protection;

– Provided using equipment, drugs and medical devices.

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

THE ARMAMENTARIUM of CPR• A (airway) – airway maneuvers• B (breathing) – evaluation and support of ventilation• C (circulation) – evaluation and support of circulation• D (drugs) - IV access and medication• E (electrocardiography) - evaluation of electrical form of cardiac arrest• F (fibrillation treatment) - defibrillation• G (gauging) – post-resuscitation evaluation• H (human mentation) – cerebral protection • I (intensive care) – post-resuscitation intensive care

THIS IS NOT THE PROPER ORDER TO APPLY

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Steps of basic life support

– Securing the environment– Evaluation of consciousness – Activation of emergency medical system (call 991)– Victim positioning – Airway maneuvers – Assessment of spontaneous breathing (10 seconds)– Artificial ventilation (2 ventilation)– Assessment of circulation (10 seconds)– Chest compressions (100/minute)– CPR sequence: 30 chest compressions /2 artificial breath – Automatic external Defibrillation

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

BLS ALGORHYTHM 1. Evaluation of consciousness

2. Activation of emergency medical system

3. Victim positioning

4. Airway maneuvers

5. Assessment of spontaneous breathing

6. Artificial ventilation

7. Assessment of circulation

8. Chest compressions

9. CPR sequence: 15 chest compressions /2 artificial breath

(no matter the number of rescuers)

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CPR recommendations 2006 – 2 essential aspects for the success of CPR:

• Avoid hyperventilation – for a pulmonary gas exchange (pulmonary blood flow decreased)– increase the intra-thoracic pressure– decrease the cardiac upload – decrease the efficiency of chest compressions– stomach insufflations (increase the risk of regurgitation/aspiration, push up

the diaphragm and increase the intra-thoracic pressure)• Avoid interrupting the chest compressions

– CPR performed by trained medical team – total time of interrupting chest compressions 24-49% of the cardiac arrest duration.

– Any interruption in chest compressions means the decrease of coronary perfusion pressure, which slowly rises when the chest compressions are delivered once again, and so the chances of returning to spontaneous circulation are decreased.

– In the first minutes of cardiac arrest (VF) the artificial ventilation is not so important as the chest compressions because the hipoxie is primary caused by the lack of tissulary perfusion, and there are sufficiently blood oxygen reserves in the first minutes. That is why the rescue person should concentrate in delivering efficient chest compressions. The new recommendations regarding the sequence chest compressions/ventilation 30:2 are made to minimalise the time of chest compression interruptions.

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The age

• newborn – immediately after birth and until hospital discharge.• infant – until the age of 1 year. • child – from 1 year until puberty (12-14 years).• adult – from puberty along

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

A AIRWAY MANEUVERS:– Should be applied in case of any unconscious victim;

– Should precede assessment of spontaneous breathing;

– Should be maintained during assessment of spontaneous breathing;

– Should precede artificial ventilation;

– Should be maintained during artificial ventilation;

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A AIRWAY MANEUVERS:

DURING BASIC LIFE SUPPORT:– Safety position

– Head tilt

– Chin lift

– Head tilt and chin lift

– Jaw thrust

– Jaw thrust and mouth opening

– Head extension, mouth opening, chin lift (Safar maneuver / triple airway maneuver);

– Finger sweep maneuver to remove foreign solid/liquid material in the airway

DURING ADVANCED LIFE SUPPORT:

– Airway devices

– Endotracheal tube placement

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A AIRWAY MANEUVERS: in patient with suspected cervical spine injury

When to suspect cervical spine injury?• Know the mechanism of injury

– Strangulation – Fall – Deceleration or acceleration s.o.

• Traumatic signs– At the cephalic extremity– In the cervical region– In the region of thorax (the superior 1/3) – Above the nipple line

Maintain the head in neutral position

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A AIRWAY MANEUVERS: in patient with suspected cervical spine injury

BASIC LIFE SUPORT:– Safety position– Head extension– Chin lift– Head tilt and chin lift – Jaw thrust maneuver– Jaw thrust mouth opening maneuver– Head extension, mouth opening, chin lift;– Finger sweep maneuver to remove foreign solid/liquid material in the airway

ADVANCED LIFE SUPPORT:– Airway devices– Tracheal intubation

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Tracheal intubation in CPR - advantages -

• maintenance of airways patency

• protection of airways against the aspiration of gastric content

• delivery of mechanical ventilation

• drug administration

• long term access to the airways

• endotracheal aspiration

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AIRWAY MANEUVERS:

Clinical signs of proper tracheal intubation – visualizing the endotracheal tube passing through vocal

cords– symmetrical thoracic expansions– equal respiratory sounds in both lungs– water vapors on the inside surface of the endotracheal tube– the absence of aeric sounds in epigastric region

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

B EVALUATION AND SUPPORT OF VENTILATION:• Assessment of spontaneous breathing

– maintaining MECA– “listen, feel and see”

• Artificial ventilation– In SVB

• Artificial ventilation “mouth-to-mouth”• Artificial ventilation “mouth-to-nose”• Artificial ventilation “mouth-to-tracheotomies”• Artificial ventilation “mouth-to-mouth and nose”• The exhaled air contain 16-18% O2

• Evaluation of the efficiency of artificial ventilation: chest movements– In SVA

• Mask and Rueben balloon• Tracheal tube and Rueben balloon• Tracheal tube and ventilators • Mechanical ventilation:

– IPPV (intermittent positive pressure ventilation)– Tidal volume 8ml/kg– Frequency: 14-16/min– FiO2 1 (O2 100%)– PEEP (positive end expiratory pressure) 0

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Artificial ventilation

CHARACTERISTICS OF „MOUTH-TO-MOUTH” VENTILATION– The rescuer takes a normal inspiratory breath

– Insufflation - 1 second

– Tidal volume 500-600ml

– Chest rise

– Frequency 10-12/minute

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CHARACTERISTICS OF MECHANICAL VENTILATION

IN ALS IN ADULT – Tidal volume 6-8ml/kg

– Frequency 8-10/minute

– Oxygen 100%

– No PEEP

– No interruptions of chest compressions for ventilation

Artificial ventilation

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATIONC CIRCULLATORY EVALUATION AND SUPPORT:ASSESSMENT of CIRCULATION

– Always in the large arteries– Adult: carotid or femoral artery; infant: brachial artery;

CHEST COMPRESSIONS– Performed during BLS and ALS– Best achievable results: 25-30% of spontaneous cardiac output– Chest compression technique:

• Victim position• Rescuer position• Technique• Parameters: depth, frequency/min, compression/decompression ratio

– Mechanisms of cardiac output during chest compression:• Cardiac pump theory• Thoracic pump theory

– Evaluation of chest compression efficiency: pulse assessment during CPR– Options to increase the efficiency of chest compression:

• Maximal values of recommended depth and frequency• Concomitantly performed chest compression and artificial ventilation• Interposed abdominal compression• Lower limb elevation at 60º (not in case of ongoing bleeding or trauma)• Active compression/decompression device• Internal cardiac massage (only during ALS)• Extracorporeal circulation

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CHEST COMPRESSION

„push hard, push fast, allow full chest recoil after each compression,

and minimize interruptions in chest compression”

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The indication for chest compression is the absence of pulse in large arteries.

There are no contraindications for chest compression.

CHEST COMPRESSION

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ADULT• Depth of sternal compression 4-6 cm

• Frequency of compressions 100/minute

• Duration of compression/Duration of decompression equal

• Full chest recoil after each compression

• Rhythmic compressions

• Avoid interrupting chest compressions

CHEST COMPRESSION

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Fractures Ribs fractures

Sternal fractures

Pathology of the serosas Pneumothorax

Hemothorax

Hemopericardium Hemoperitoneum

Visceral injuries Pulmonary rupture

Hepatic rupture

Spleen rupture

Gastric rupture

Other complications Aspiration of gastric content

CHEST COMPRESSIONScomplications

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ALTERNATIVE TECHNIQUES OF CARDIAC MASSAGE

• High frequency chest compressions

• Interposed abdominal compression

• Internal cardiac massage

• CPR through „coughing”

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MECHANICAL DEVICES FOR CARDIOCIRCULATORY SUPPORT

• Active compression-decompression device

• Resistance-level valve device

• Mechanical piston device

• CPR vest

• Phase thoraco-abdominal compression-decompression manual device

• Extracorporeale circulation

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATIONC MEDICATION:• Routes for drug administration

– Peripheral intravenous access – standard route– Central intravenous access – Endotracheal administration– Intraosseous administration– Intracardiac administration

• Drugs:– Oxygen – Epinephrine– Atropine– Lidocaine– Vasopresine– Sodium bicarbonate– Amiodarone– Procainamide – Magnesium sulphate– Dopamine – Volume solutions

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PERIPHERAL VENOUS ACCESS

Advantages Disadvantages

• Simple technique

• Short time for installation

• No need for the interruption of chest compressions

• Long time of drug circulation

• Easy to lose venous access

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• The second option for venous access in CPR. • Give access to noncolappsed veins, so the intraosseous drugs

administration is similar to the central venous administration. • There are dedicated truce for intraosseous access. • Similar drug doses as in intravenous administration. • Offers a good alternative in hipovolemic patients with difficult

venous access.

INTRAOSSEOUS ACCESS

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CENTRAL VENOUS ACCEESS

Advantages Disavantages

• Short time of drug circulation

• Safe and longlasting access

• Hipertonic solutions/cathecolamines

• Temporary interruption of cardiac massage

• Long time for instalation

• Vital complications possible

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ENDOTRACHEAL DRUG ADMINISTRATION IN CPR

• through tracheal tube

• 2-2,5x of intravenous doses

• diluted in NaCl 0,9% 5-10 ml

• 5 vigorous ventilations after

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

E ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY:– Electrical forms of cardiac arrest

• Ventricular fibrillation

• Pulseless ventricular tachycardia

• Pulseless electrical activity – Electromechanical dissociation

– Pseudo Electromechanical dissociation

– Idio-ventricular rhythm

– Escape rhythm

– Bradiasystole

• Asystole

Identification of the eletrical form of cardiac arrest allows the choice of the proper CPR algorythm

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F DEFIBRILLATION:

Defibrillation terms an electrical shock delivered asynchronous with QRS complex.

The electrical shock induce a synchronous depolarization followed by a synchronous repolarization of all the myocardic cells.

CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION

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CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATIONF DEFIBRILLATION:

– Goal

– Defibrillation technique:• Patient position

• Rescuer position

• Paddles preparation and position

• “Clear” order

• Energy

• Checking for efficiency

– Indications

– Differences cardioversion/defibrillation:• Synchronic/asynchronic shock

• Preparations

• Energy

• Indications

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DEFIBRILLATION

DEFIBRILLATION TECHNIQUE:– Patient positioning– Rescuer positioning– Electrode position– Clear order– Energy– Checking for efficiency

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• Precocity of defibrillation • „Shock first versus CPR first”• Shortning the time period between the last chest compression

and shock• „1-Shock Protocol”• CPR after shock

DEFIBRILLATION Characteristics

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ENERGY OF DEFIBRILLATION

• monophasic electrical current – initially 360 J and than the same energy.

• biphasic electrical current - initially 200 J, than higher energy 300 J, than 360 J.

• In recurrent VF/ pulseless ventricular tachycardia – the energy for the next shock is the energy which last time converted the cardiac rhythm.

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EXTERNAL ELECTRICAL SHOCK

• Cardioversion terms the delivery of an electrical shock synchronous with QRS complex. Syncronization avoids the delivery of the electrical shock during relative refractory period of the heart cycle, period during witch the electrical shock may induce VF.

• Defibrillation terms the delivery of an electrical shock asynchronous with the QRS complex.

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CARDIOVERSION

PREPARINGS FOR CARDIOVERSION

• The patient should be monitored for EKG and noninvasive blood tension.

• Oxygen therapy.

• Venous access.

• Rescue truce and drugs should be prepared.

• Analgesia and sedation.

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CARDIOVERSION AND DEFIBRILLATION

CHARACTERISTICS

CARDIOVERSION DEFIBRILLATION

Initial energy 50-100 J 200 J

Synchronization

with QRS complex

YES NO

Indications •TPSV

•Paroxistic Atrial Flutter

•Paroxistic Atrial Fibrillation

•Ventricular Tachycardia with pulse

•Ventricular Fibrillation

•Pulseless Ventricular Tachycardia

•Poliform Ventricular Tachycardia with pulse

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MONITORING DURING CPR

• End tidal CO2

• EKG

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POSTRESUSCITATION STATUS

• After recovery of spontaneous circulation

• A period of great homeostatic disequilibrium

• Generated by:

– Hypoxic lesions

– Ischemic lesions

– Reperfusion lesions.

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Hemodinamic Myocardial dysfunction

(generated by global myocardial ischemia and defibrillation)

Low cardiac output syndrome

Transitory raise of myocardial enzymes

Hemodinamic instability

Cardiac rhythm anomalies

Neurological Coma

Initially cerebral hyperemia, than decreased cerebral blood flow

(even at normal blood pressure values)

Hyperthermia of central origin

Convulsions

Respiratory Ventilatory dysfunction

Blood oxygenation anomalies

Metabolic Metabolic acidosis

Hyperglycemia

POSTRESUSCITATION STATUSPhysiopathology

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Dysfunctions may be:• Moderate with progressive tendency to resolution

• Severe and persistent

Frequently at 48-72 hours post resuscitation

Poor prognostic

POSTRESUSCITATION STATUS

Persistent coma Central origin hyperthermiaConvulsionsMultiple organ deficiency syndrome