2. HISTORICAL REVIEW
• In the 19th century, Doctor H. R. Silvester
described a method “The Silvester Method”.
• Holger Neilson technique was in the United States
in 1911.
• In the 20th century at Johns Hopkins University
where the technique of CPR was originally
developed. The first effort at testing the
technique was performed on a dog by Redding,
Safar and JW Perason. Soon afterward, the
technique was used to save the life of a child.
• Peter Safar wrote the book ABC of resuscitation in
1957.
5. 5
Diagnosis of cardiac arrest
Symptoms of cardiac arrest
3 absence of pulse on carotid arteries – a
pathognomonic symptom
3 respiration arrest – may be in 30 seconds after
cardiac arrest
3 enlargement of pupils – may be in 90 seconds after
cardiac arrest
Blood pressure measurement
Taking the pulse on peripheral arteries
Auscultation of cardiac tones
Loss of time !!!
6. AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION:
2010 GUIDELINES
Health Care Provider*
“PUSH HARD AND PUSH FAST”
At least 100 COMPRESSIONS / MINUTE*
Allow the chest to recoil -- equal compression and relaxation times
<10 seconds for pulse checks or rescue breaths
Compression Depth*
Adults 2”
Child/Infant 1/3 depth of chest 1.5" infant 2" child
Avoid excessive ventilations
7. A-B-C changed to C-A-B*
Critical element is chest compressions
Delay in A-B
Avoidance of A & B
Early defib
If alone--call and retrieve AED
Exception asphyxial arrest
AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION:
2010 GUIDELINES
8. AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION:
2010 GUIDELINES
• Cricoid pressure not recommended
• Advanced airway = 1 every 6-8 seconds
• Adult: 1 every 5-6 Peds: 1 every 3
• With advanced airway- no pause
11. Electrical Therapies
• Shock first vs CPR first
• No precordial thump
• AED in hospital (goal to shock =< 3 mins)
• Use in infants (with or without attenuator)
AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION:
2010 GUIDELINES
12. ACLS
• Simplified algorithm
• Optimized CPR quality with monitoring
• Waveform capnography (>12 mmHg)
• Atropine deleted (PEA/Asystole)
• Chronotropic drugs for brady, then pacing
• Adenosine safe for monomorphic wide tachs
• Post-cardiac arrest
AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION:
2010 GUIDELINES
15. AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION:
2010 GUIDELINES
• Asthma
• Anaphylaxis
• Pregnancy
• Morbid obesity
• PE
• Electrolyte imbalance
• Toxins
Special Resuscitation Situations
• Hypothermia
• Avalanche
• Drowning
• Electric shock/lightening
• PCI
• Cardiac tamponade
• Cardiac surgery
16. AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION:
2010 GUIDELINES
Acute Coronary Syndromes
• Out of hospital 12-lead
• Triage to PCI
• Oxygen – > 94 % is the goal (capno)
• Morphine – use with caution in UA/non-STEMI
21. 21
Open the airway using a head
tilt lifting of chin. Do not tilt the
head too far back
Check the pulse on
carotid artery using
fingers of the other hand
22. 22
B (Breathing)
Tilt the head back
and listen for. If
not breathing
normally, pinch
nose and cover
the mouth with
yours and blow
until you see the
chest rise.
23. VENTRICULAR FIBRILLATION OR PULSELESS TACHYCARDIA
23
Witnessed Unwitnessed
Precordial thump
Check pulse, if none:
Begin CPR
Defibrillate with 200 joules
Defibrillate with 200-300 joules
Establish IV access, intubate
Adrenaline 1 mg push
Defibrillate with 360 joules
Lidocaine 1 mg/kg IV, ET
Defibrillate with 360 joules
24. 24
Operations in case of asystole
Asystole
• Start CPR
• IV line
• Adrenaline:IV 1 mg, each 3-5 min.
-or
- intratracheal 2 - 2.5 mg
- in the absence of effect increase
the dose
-Atropine 1 mg push (repeated once
in 5 min)
•Na Bicarbonate 1 Eq/kg IV
•Consider pacing
25. 25
Drugs used in CPR
• Atropine – can be injected bolus, max 3 mg to
block vagal tone, which plays significant role in
some cases of cardiac arrest
• Adrenaline – large doses have been
withdrawn from the algorithm. The
recommended dose is 1 mg in each 3-5 min.
• Vasopresine – in some cases 40 U can
replace adrenaline
• Amiodarone - should be included in algorithm
• Lidocaine – should be used only in ventricular
fibrillation
29. 2010 AHA GUIDELINES
Recommendations
Component Adults Children Infants
Recognition Unresponsive (for all ages)
No breathing or
no normal
breathing (ie, only
gasping)
No breathing or only gasping
No pulse palpated within 10 seconds for all ages (HCP only)
CPR sequence C-A-B
Compression rate At least 100/min
Compression
depth
At least 2 inches (5
cm)
At least 2 inches (5
cm)
About 1. inches (4
cm)
30. Recommendations
Component Adults Children Infants
Chest wall recoil Allow complete recoil between compressions
HCPs rotate compressors every 2 minutes
Compression
interruptions
Minimize interruptions in chest compressions
Attempt to limit interrruptions to <10 seconds
Airway Head tilt–chin lift (HCP suspected trauma: jaw thrust)
Compression-to-
ventilation
ratio (until advanced
airway placed)
30:2
1 or 2
rescuers
30:2
Single rescuer
15:2
2 HCP rescuers
Ventilations: when
rescuer
untrained or trained and
not proficient
Compressions only
31. Ventilations with
advanced
airway (HCP)
1 breath every 6-8 seconds (8-10
breaths/min)
Asynchronous with chest compressions
About 1 second per breath
Visible chest rise
Defibrillation Attach and use AED as soon as available.
Minimize interruptions in chest
compressions before and after shock;
resume CPR beginning with compressions
immediately after each shock.