Circulation, Vol 76, 363-375, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
MP Feneley, GW Maier, JW Gaynor, SA Gall, JA Kisslo, JW Davis and JS Rankin
According to the thoracic pump model of cardiopulmonary resuscitation
(CPR), the heart serves as a passive conduit for blood flow from the
pulmonary to the systemic vasculature, necessitating an open mitral valve
and anterograde transmitral blood flow during chest compression. To assess
the applicability of this model to manual CPR techniques, two- dimensional
echocardiograms were recorded from the right chest wall and/or the
esophagus in nine dogs (18 to 26 kg) during manual CPR. The aortic valve
opened with chest compression and closed with release, while the pulmonary
and tricuspid valve leaflets closed with compression and opened during
release. The mitral valve remained open during ventilation alone and during
abdominal compressions. With the onset of brief, high-velocity
(high-impulse) chest compressions, the mitral valve closed rapidly and the
left ventricle was deformed, whether compressions were applied to the
sternum or the left mid-chest wall. The mitral valve reopened with release
of each compression. Left atrial echocardiographic contrast injections
confirmed the absence of anterograde transmitral blood flow during
high-impulse compression and its presence during release. Failure of mitral
leaflet approximation during chest compression was observed only when a
very low-velocity, prolonged (low-impulse) compression technique was used,
or when regions that did not directly overlie the heart were compressed.
Consistent with these observations, simultaneous recordings of the left
ventricular and left atrial pressures during high-impulse sternal
compressions in five dogs (19 to 25 kg) demonstrated peak and mean left
ventriculoatrial pressure gradients of 38.5 +/- 4.0 and 13.5 +/- 2.9 mm Hg,
respectively, and these pressure gradients declined with less impulsive
compressions. The observations made during all but low- impulse chest
compressions are inconsistent with the thoracic pump model, and support
direct cardiac compression as the primary mechanism of forward blood flow
with more impulsive manual chest compression techniques.
ARTICLES
Sequence of mitral valve motion and transmitral blood flow during manual cardiopulmonary resuscitation in dogs
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