María Reyes-Martínez GdaVet, Vicente J. Herrería-Bustillo LV MVetMed, DACVECC, DECVECC
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
To determine whether CPR providers can perform chest compressions (CC) appropriately at a rate of 150 compressions per minute during a 2-minute cycle and to identify the presence of rescuer fatigue.
Design
High fidelity simulator study.
Setting
University veterinary teaching hospital.
Subjects
Sixty subjects, 30 women and 30 men.
Interventions
Subjects performed CC at 150 compressions per minute on a dog manikin for 2 minutes. Real-time depth of compressions, compression release, and compression rate were measured using a CPR training device. Demographic data from the subjects were analyzed alongside data obtained from the monitoring device.
Measurements and Main Results
Only 38.3% of participants were able to perform CC with appropriate depth and release at 150 compressions per minute during a 2-minute cycle. There was a decay in the quality of CC between the first and the second minute. The number of compressions and percentage of compressions with correct release were similar among various genders, ages, and professions. In contrast, the percentage of compressions with correct depth was significantly higher among individuals with higher body mass index (correlation coefficient [r] = 0.293; P = 0.023) and higher biceps brachii muscle circumference during muscle contraction (r = 0.423; P = 0.001).
Conclusions
This study suggests that increasing the compression rate to 150 compressions per minute in large dogs using the thoracic pump technique might not be viable because most participants were not able to sustain enough appropriate CC. Rescuer fatigue affects compression depth at this rate, leading to a decay in CPR quality.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care’s primary aim is to advance the international clinical standard of care for emergency/critical care patients of all species. The journal’s content is relevant to specialist and non-specialist veterinarians practicing emergency/critical care medicine. The journal achieves it aims by publishing descriptions of unique presentation or management; retrospective and prospective evaluations of prognosis, novel diagnosis, or therapy; translational basic science studies with clinical relevance; in depth reviews of pertinent topics; topical news and letters; and regular themed issues.
The journal is the official publication of the Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society, the American College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care, the European Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society, and the European College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care. It is a bimonthly publication with international impact and adheres to currently accepted ethical standards.