乌斯坦式犬猫住院心肺复苏统一报告指南一条RECOVER语句。

M. Boller, D. Fletcher, B. Brainard, S. Haskins, K. Hopper, V. Nadkarni, P. Morley, M. McMichael, R. Nishimura, J. Robben, E. Rozanski, E. Rudloff, J. Rush, A. Shih, Sean D. Smarick, Luis H Tello
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引用次数: 21

摘要

目的为回顾和报告犬和猫的临床院内心肺复苏(CPR)事件提供建议,并为心肺复苏术语建立明确的操作定义。DESIGNConsensus指南。背景:国际、学术界、转诊实践、全科实践和人类医学。方法2013年4月在旧金山召开国际兽医乌特斯坦工作组会议,确定项目范围、报告变量及其定义和报告模板。定义了对有意义的数据报告至关重要且易于准确收集的因素(即核心变量)和对研究项目和假设生成有用的附加变量(即补充变量)。对每个项目的共识要么是在会议期间达成的,要么是在随后的在线修改的德尔菲过程和工作组成员之间的对话中达成的。结果变量被定义为医院、动物、事件(逮捕)和结局变量。本报告推荐一个模板,用于标准化报告涉及狗或猫的兽医院内心肺复苏术研究。核心要素包括怀疑的原因和骤停的位置,确定的第一次心律,自发循环恢复(ROSC)超过30秒(任何ROSC)或超过20分钟(持续ROSC)的发生,存活到放电以及放电时的功能能力。如果心肺复苏术停止或病人安乐死的主人的要求,一个原因报告。工作组建议使用病例报告表格用于个别复苏事件。结论这些兽医小动物心肺复苏报告指南的可用性将鼓励和促进高质量的兽医心肺复苏研究,改善研究之间和研究地点之间的数据比较,并为兽医心肺复苏登记奠定基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Utstein-style guidelines on uniform reporting of in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation in dogs and cats. A RECOVER statement.
OBJECTIVE To provide recommendations for reviewing and reporting clinical in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) events in dogs and cats and to establish nonambiguous operational definitions for CPR terminology. DESIGN Consensus guidelines. SETTING International, academia, referral practice, general practice, and human medicine. METHODS An international veterinary Utstein task force was convened in April 2013 in San Francisco to determine the scope of the project, the variables to be reported, their definitions, and a reporting template. Factors that were essential for meaningful data reporting and were amenable to accurate collection (ie, core variables) and additional variables useful for research projects and hypothesis generation (ie, supplemental variables) were defined. Consensus on each item was either achieved during that meeting or during the subsequent online modified Delphi process and dialogue between task force members. RESULTS Variables were defined and categorized as hospital, animal, event (arrest), and outcome variables. This report recommends a template for standardized reporting of veterinary in-hospital CPR studies involving dogs or cats. Core elements include the suspected cause(s) and location of arrest, first rhythm identified, the occurrence of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) of more than 30 seconds (any ROSC) or more than 20 minutes (sustained ROSC), survival to discharge, and functional capacity at discharge. If CPR is discontinued or the patient is euthanized by owner request, a reason is reported. The task force suggests a case report form to be used for individual resuscitation events. CONCLUSIONS The availability of these veterinary small animal CPR reporting guidelines will encourage and facilitate high-quality veterinary CPR research, improve data comparison between studies and across study sites, and serve as the foundation for veterinary CPR registries.
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