Circulation. 2005;112:IV-47-IV-50
Published online before print November 28, 2005,
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.166555
(Circulation. 2005;112:IV-47 IV-50.)
© 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.
2005 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care |
Part 6: CPR Techniques and Devices
An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract.
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Introduction
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Over the past 25 years a variety of alternatives to standard
manual CPR have been developed in an effort to improve ventilation
or perfusion during cardiac arrest and ultimately to improve
survival. Compared with standard CPR, these techniques and devices
typically require more personnel, training, or equipment, or
they apply to a specific setting. Maximum benefits are reported
when adjuncts are begun early in the treatment of cardiac arrest,
so that the use of these alternatives to CPR is often limited
to the hospital setting. To date no adjunct has consistently
been shown to be superior to standard manual CPR for out-of-hospital
basic life support, and no device other than a defibrillator
has consistently improved long-term survival from out-of-hospital
cardiac arrest. The data reported here is limited to clinical
trials, so most animal data is excluded from this section.
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CPR Techniques
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High-Frequency Chest Compressions
High-frequency (>100 per minute) manual or mechanical chest
compressions have been studied as a technique for improving
resuscitation from cardiac arrest.
14 The sparse animal
and human data available show mixed results. One clinical trial
of 9 patients showed that high-frequency (120 per minute) chest
compressions improved hemodynamics over standard CPR (LOE 4).
5 The use of high-frequency chest compressions for cardiac arrest
by adequately trained rescue personnel can be considered, but
there is insufficient evidence to recommend for or against its
use (Class Indeterminate).
Open-Chest CPR
No prospective randomized studies of open-chest CPR for resuscitation have been published. Four relevant human studies were reviewed: 2 were performed to treat in-hospital cardiac arrest following cardiac . . . [Full Text of this Article]