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Devices to Assist Circulation

Devices to Assist Circulation. Alternative CPR techniques Assessment of CPR. Physiology of Ventilation during CPR. Gas distribution will be determined by the relative impedance to flow Lower esophageal opening pressure and reduced lung-thorax compliance

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Devices to Assist Circulation

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  1. Devices to Assist Circulation • Alternative CPR techniques • Assessment of CPR

  2. Physiology of Ventilation during CPR • Gas distribution will be determined by the relative impedance to flow • Lower esophageal opening pressure and reduced lung-thorax compliance insp. pressure must be kept low to avoid gastric insufflation • If airway remains patent, chest compression cause substantial air exchange.

  3. Physiology of gas transport during CPR • Decrease CO2 excretion • Increase PvCO2 --- buffering acid causes a ↓HCO3- ---↑tissue partial pressure of CO2 • Reduce CaCO2 and PaCO2 • Low end-tidal CO2(ET- CO2 correlate well with cardiac output during CPR)

  4. ET-CO2 monitoring • High correlation with C.O. ,CPP, initial resuscitation and survival during CPR • Usually to >20 mmHg during successful CPR • When ROSC , the earliest sign is a sudden increase in ET-CO2 to>40 mmHg • Higher ET-CO2 associated with an increase in resuscitation

  5. Blood movement during closed chest compression • Cardiac compression pump theory • Intrathoracic pressure pump theory

  6. Blood movement during CPR • Fluctuations in intrathoracic pressure play a significant role in blood flow during CPR • The amount of chest compression is a critical determination of flow , and the quality of chest compression will likely be a major factor in the effectiveness of CPR

  7. Physiology of circulation during standard manual CPR • C.O. severly depressed to 10-30﹪of prearrest • Brain blood flow:20﹪ • Coronary blood flow:5-15﹪ • Lower extremity & abd. visceral flow < 5﹪ of C.O.

  8. Successful resuscitation • Myocardial blood flow:15-30 ml/min/loog • Aortic diastolic pressure>40 mmHg • Coronary perfusion pressure >20-25 mmHg CPP higher than 15 mmHg to achieve ROSC

  9. Alternative CPR techniques • Interposed abdominal compression(IAC)CPR • Active compresion-decompression(ACD)CPR • Phased thoracic-abd. compression-decompression(PTACD)CPR • High frequency CPR • Vest CPR • Simultaneous ventilation-compression(SVC)CPR • Invasive CPR

  10. IAC-CPR: • Abdominal compression during the relaxation phase of chest compression • “Priming of the intrathoracic pump” before systole • “Abdominal pump” mechanism , as IABP • Abdominal compression point & force • Class II b

  11. IAC-CPR • 50﹪increase in MAP & 37﹪increase in CPP campared with standard CPR • Survival studies with IAC-CPR haven’t produced consistent results.

  12. ACD-CPR • A suction-cup device to pull up the chest during chest relaxation • “Prime the thoracic pump” • Place over mid-sternum • A rate of 80-100/min with compression depth of 1.5~2.0 inches

  13. ACD-CPR • Greater chest expansion more negative intrathoracic pressure 1. augment venous return 2. increase minute ventilation • Class II b

  14. Outcomes of p’t assigned to ACD or standard CPR

  15. Outcome according to the resuscitation procedure

  16. Factors with improvement in ACD-CPR • Rigorous and repetitive training • Concurrent use of low-rather than high-dose Epi. • Use of the force gauge • Peformance of CPR for a duration sufficient to prime the pump

  17. PTACD-CPR • Hand-held device that alternates chest compression and abd. decompression with chest decom & abd. compression • Combines the concepts of IAC-CPR & ACD-CPR • Combined 4-phase approach • Class:Indeterminate

  18. Vest-CPR • “Thoracic pump mechanism” of blood flow • Increased inthrathoracic pressure fluctuations ---increased chest compression force ---increased airway collapse during compression • Reduced amount of chest deformation • Greater transmission of vest pressure to intrathoracic space • Class II b • Used in-hospital or during ambulance

  19. High-Frequency CPR(Rapid Compression Rate) • High velocity , moderate force , and brief duration to optimize cardiac stroke volume • A rate of 100-120/min to optimize CBF • Improve C.O. & aortic diastolic pressure • Class:indeterminate

  20. Mechanical (Piston)CPR • Optimize effective ext. chest compression and reduce rescuer fatigue • Should be limited to adult • Delivery of a consistent rate & depth of compression • Compression-ventilation ratio of 5:1 compression duration is 50﹪of the cycle • Class II b

  21. Mechanical (Piston)CPR • Sternal fracture • Expense • Size , weight • Restriction on mobility • Dislocation of the plunger

  22. SVC-CPR • Improved peak compression (systolic)pressure • Thoracic pump mechanism • Pressure gradient between intra & extra-thoracic vascular beds. • Is not currently available for clinical use

  23. Invasive CPR: • Direct cardiac compression • Emergency cardiopulmonary bypass

  24. Direct cardiac compression • Provide near-normal perfusion • Used early(<25min), compression rate of 60-80/min • Associated with some morbidity • Should not be used as a last-ditch effort • Class II b

  25. Indication for “open chest” CPR • Penetrating chest trauma with developing cardiac arrest • Cardiac arrest caused by hypothermia , pul. embolism or pericardial tamponade • Chest deformity where closed-chest CPR is ineffective • Penetrating abd. trauma with deterioration & cardiac arrest

  26. Emergency C-P-B • Femoral artery & vein with thoracotomy • For specific , potentially reversible causes ---drug overdoses ---hypothermic arrest • Class:Indeterminate

  27. Summary of CPR adjuncts • Specific clinical setting • Additional personnel , training , equipment • Increase forward flow : 20-100﹪ • Produce little benefit when started late or late last-ditch measure

  28. Assessment of CPR • Assess hemodynamics • Assess respiratory gases • Assess chest compression

  29. Assessment of Hemodynamics • Pefusion pressure • Pulse

  30. Assessment of Resp. gases • ABG • Oximetry:limitated factors • Capnometry ---as an early indicator of ROSC ---Class II b

  31. Assessment of chest compression • Quality of chest compression • Resuscitative effort • “CPR-plus” during CPR Class Indeterminate

  32. Conclusion • No good prognostic criteria to assess the efficacy of CPR • Clinical outcome is often the only way to judge CPR efforts • Faster definitive therapy improves surrival better than any variations in CPR technique

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