1 / 29

Why Emergency Physicians Don ’ t Care about Cardiac Arrest and Should.

Why Emergency Physicians Don ’ t Care about Cardiac Arrest and Should. Robert Swor, DO Professor, Emergency Medicine Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine. Objectives. Epidemiology of Cardiac Arrest Survival Relative impact of interventions

kipling
Download Presentation

Why Emergency Physicians Don ’ t Care about Cardiac Arrest and Should.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Why Emergency Physicians Don’t Care about Cardiac Arrest and Should. • Robert Swor, DO • Professor, Emergency Medicine • Oakland University William Beaumont • School of Medicine

  2. Objectives • Epidemiology of Cardiac Arrest Survival • Relative impact of interventions • Relative impact of Phases of Care • Where do Emergency Physicians Make a Difference

  3. Emergency Physician Perspectives of Cardiac Arrest Resuscitation • It’s Futile • We just bring back patients to a vegetative state • The Only people that arrest are Gomers at the end of Life • This One’s comatose-He’s Toast • It’s a poor use of Health Care Dollars

  4. My Question • Are physician attitudes a self fulfilling prophecy? • i.e Do post arrest patients do poorly because we’re not aggressive with them in ED and hospital?

  5. Emergency Department Patient Scenarios • Field Cardiac Arrest • Post-Arrest- CPR in Progress • Post Arrest-DefibrillatedChest burns, alert • Post arrest-ResuscitatedSTEMI • Post Arrest- Comatose • Pre-Arrest-Crumps in the ED

  6. Cardiac Arrest Outcomes Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest 225,000/yr In Hospital Cardiac Arrest 75,000/yr 17% Survive to Discharge ROSC 44% 20-25% survival To Admission (40-45% of Admitted Survive to Discharge) (38.6% of ROSC Survive to Discharge) Overall 5-10%Survival

  7. Neurologic Outcome Out of Hospital Arrest • Neurologic Death 25-30% • If survive to discharge • Excellent QOL if Early Defib • 5 Year survival Similar to age and health matched controls • OPALS-Good quality of life for survivors at 1 year* • Bunch TJ, NEJM 2003:348:2626-2633 • Steill, Circ 2003:108:1939

  8. Field Cardiac Arrest • CPR not Transported to Hospital • CPR in Progress on ED Arrival • Futile?

  9. 1

  10. What Happens to Field Cardiac Arrest • CARES Registry • 27,675 OHCA events • 18,541 (67.0%) with no field ROSC. • 12095 (65.2%) were pronounced in the field • 5618 (30.3%) had resuscitation terminated in the ED • 828 (4.5%) survived to admission

  11. Variation in Field Pronouncement after Failed Resuscitation-CARES

  12. Field Termination without ROSC-ROC Consortium

  13. Survivors To Admission • 828 (14.7% of transported) Survive to Admission • 128 survived to discharge (15.4%) • 81 (9.8%) survived with good cerebral performance.

  14. Termination of Resuscitation in Field-Decision Rules • ALS • No ROSC • No Bystander CPR • Not witnessed arrest • No shock Delivered • BLS • No ROSC • No witnessed • No AED shock

  15. Clinical Decision Rules for TOR-Evidence Based Review – Sherbino J. Em Med 2009:10:1016 • Literature Review • 4 Decision Rules • 3 BLS: 1 ALS • 6 Validation Studies • BLS Rule –PPV 99.5% (98.9%,99.8%) • Decreases transport 62.6% • ALS rule-no good quality validation study

  16. Cardiac Arrest Patients are All Gomers at the End of Life? • Need better work on who shouldn’t get CPR • Decreased Survival with Age • End of Life Planning and Care

  17. Unwanted or Not Indicated Resuscitation • King County 1994 (Dull) • 7% had undocumented DNR • 25% Severe Chronic Disease

  18. Possible Predictors of Outcomes After Cardiac Arrest • Clinical presentation • Arrest factors • Age • Diapers • Neuro exam • HCT • EEG • N-100 Enolase

  19. Impact of Therapeutic HypothermiaNielsonActa Anaes Scan 2009; 53:926-934 • Scandinavian Registry • 238 pts with Hypothermia - 7 Countries • Good Neurological Outcome • 22% Non VF • 56% VF

  20. Neurologic OutcomeOut of Hospital Arrest • Neurologic Death 25-30% • If survive to discharge • Excellent QOL if Early Defib • 5 Year survival Similar to age and health matched controls • OPALS-Good quality of life for survivors at 1 year* • Bunch TJ, NEJM 2003:348:2626-2633 • Steill, Circ 2003:108:1939

  21. Obstacle to initiating Aggressive Care No reliable data on predictors of outcome in first 3 days Consistent with AHA 2010 Guidelines Inability to Predict Outcomes

  22. Predicting Outcomes-Post Hypothermia

  23. ECMO To Support CPR in Adults • 1992-2007 • ELSO Database • Adults>18 years • Mean Age 52 • Survival in 27% • Brain Death in 29% • Ann Thoracic Surg 2009:87:778-785

  24. Case Study • Refractory Cardiac Arrest • 53 y/o male, severe 3 vessel ds • Post op CABG-refractory VF post op day 4 • 65 minutes CPR during attempted resuscitation-cannulation • ECMO for 4 days • Neuro intact, ICD placed, waiting for transplant

  25. Cost Effectiveness of Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest Care • Cost Effective • Public Access Defibrillation • Nichol-$56,000 (IQR $44,000,$77,000) • Walker-$68,000 (Scotland) • Police AED • $2,000-$15,000/year of life saved • Advanced Life Support • Valenzuela-$8,800/year of Life saved (1990)

  26. Money Mechanics of L1CAC Survival 26 Lick et al. Crit Care Med 2011;39(1):26-33.

  27. Conclusion • CPR in progress Ominous prognosis • Resuscitated arrest • VF-Good outcome • Non-VF- Uncertain • Prognostication-Fool’s game • Time’s they’re a changin’ • Hypothermia • Aggressive therapy

More Related