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1. Overview of ACLS May 2006
2. Slide 16. Acute Myocardial Infarction
Acute myocardial infarction (MI) represents a major health issue in the United States today. About 900,000 people in the U.S. experience an MI each year. Of these, approximately 225,000 die. More than half of them, about 125,000, die “in the field,” before reaching the hospital. Most MI deaths are arrhythmic in etiology.1
Reference
1. Ryan TJ, Anderson JL, Antman EM, et al. ACC/AHA guidelines for the management of patients with acute myocardial infarction. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1996;28:1333.Slide 16. Acute Myocardial Infarction
Acute myocardial infarction (MI) represents a major health issue in the United States today. About 900,000 people in the U.S. experience an MI each year. Of these, approximately 225,000 die. More than half of them, about 125,000, die “in the field,” before reaching the hospital. Most MI deaths are arrhythmic in etiology.1
Reference
1. Ryan TJ, Anderson JL, Antman EM, et al. ACC/AHA guidelines for the management of patients with acute myocardial infarction. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1996;28:1333.
3. Mechanisms of CA 80-90% of non-traumatic cardiac arrests in adults are due to VF or PVT
The key action is early defibrillation
Most arrests in children are respiratory
The key action is ventilation
4. Success of Defibrillation is Time-Dependent
5. AED The AED assesses the rhythm and advises shocks for VT/VF
After shocks resume CPR and reassess rhythm after 5 cycles (two) minutes
If pulse returns, assess and assist breathing
6. Pulseless VT/VF Witnessed: Consider precordial thump (optional, may be harmful)
Unwitnessed: CPR for 2 minutes prior to shock
Shock 1 time. Level of energy with monophasic shock: 360 J. Biphasic: 120-200J.
Resume CPR immediately after shock. Check rhythm after 2 minutes
7. Pulseless VT/VF Persists After Shock Start Drugs The key drug in CA mgmt is epinephrine
For every type of CA, epinephrine is given every 3-5 minutes until a pulse is restored
Vasopressin ( 40 u) may be given instead of the first or second dose of epinephrine
Simultaneously, intubate, oxygenate ventilate
8. CPR Pointers The compresssion rate is 100 per minute. Be sure compressions are full (1 ½-2”) and fast , but be sure that chest recoil is complete between compressions.
Hand position is mid-sternal at nipple line
9. CPR Pointers Minimize all CPR interruptions
Once the patient is intubated do not interrupt chest compressions for ventilation
Following intubation: Ventilation rate is 8-10 per minute. Do not hyperventilate
10. Pulseless VT/VF
Proceed with a drug/shock sequence. Do CPR for 5 cycles (2 minutes) after a drug is administered, then shock
Still in VF: amiodirone 300 mg IV. May give an additional 150 mg if VF persists
Minimize interruptions in CPR for pulse checks
11. Anti-Arrhythmics for PVT/VF After amiodirone:
Lidocaine 1-1.5 mg/kg IV, may repeat in 3-5 min (max 3 mg/kg)
Magnesium sulfate: 1-2 gm IV for suspected hypomagnesemia or torsades
Procaineamide: 30 mg/min or 100 mg q5 min (max 17mg/kg)
Consider bicarbonate: 1mg/kg for pre-existing acidosis, drug OD, prolonged code
12. Endotracheal Drug Adm VALEN: Vasopressin, atropine, lidocaine, epinephrine, naloxone
IV administration is preferable: indicated only when iv access cannot be obtained
Dose is 2-5X the iv dose. Dilute in sterile water
13. Central vs Peripheral Line Peripheral iv is preferred because of less interruption of CPR
Peripherally administered drugs should be followed by fluid bolus and arm elevation to facilitate delivery to central circulation
14. 80 yo comes into ER with weakness. On exam he is pale and diaphoretic, but alert and oriented and complaining of weakness. PMH: CABG, diabetes
Initial EKG:
16. Acute anterior MI
Initial evaluation
17. Evaluate ABC
If adequate start O2, monitor (EKG and pulse ox), IV (OMI)
iv site-antecubital
Asa, heparin, pain control cardiology consult
18. His rhythm changes
20. What do you want to know?
21. Stable or unstable-presence of serious signs and symptoms?
In this case starts out with BP114/70, ie stable
22. Treat with amiodarone 150mg iv over 10 minutes and then infusion of 1mg/min
Patient remains in VT-develops MS changes and pulse weakens
Stable or unstable?
Treatment
23. VT with pulse, unstable-cardiovert
This means a synchronized shock-you press the synch button on the defib
Consider sedation
Start with 100j
Patient changes as machine is charging-now pulseless and apneic
25. Shock 360j (or 200 biphasic) if the sync button is still pressed it won’t work-turn off
Do CPR for 2 minutes before checking rhythm
Ventilate with BVM and 100% O2, intubate
Start iv, give epi or vasopressin
26. Intubation Secures the airway
Allows administration of 100% oxygen and correction of respiratory acidosis
Allows administration of some medications (VALEN-3X iv dose)
What if you can’t intubate??
27. Laryngeal Mask Airway
28. LMA The LMA is inserted by slipping the mask along the palate into the hypopharynx with subsequent inflation of the mask rim
29. Epi-1 mg q3-5 min or vasopressin 40 units
Shock-still VF
Amiodarone 300mg-shock, then 150 mg then infusion (max 2.2 grams per 24 hours)
Lidocaine 1-1.5 mg/kg. Repeat x1 max 3mg/kg.
30. How do you check that the ETT is properly placed?
How do you know CPR is adequate
31. ETT placement Listen over both lateral lung fields and the stomach
Use end tidal CO2 (but no CO2 if CPR is not adequate)
32. Adequate CPR Palpable carotid or femoral pulse
Pulse oximeter or A-line
CO2 production
33. Vasopressin in CA Half life is 10-20 minutes, so consider waiting at least 10 minutes to give epinephrine
Comparing survival in out of hospital arrest, no advantage of vasopressin over epinephrine (in one study, it looked better for asystole)
34. What if they come back with a pulse but inadequate BP?
35. Low BP Fluid bolus
Dopamine-5 micrograms/kg/min titrate (put 200 mcg in 250cc and start at 30 drops/min)
36. When to Stop ? CV unresponsiveness
You get more info about situation and code status
37. Asystole/PEA Confirm asystole in more than one lead (use lead select to move between limb leads)
Transcutaneous pacing is ineffective for asystole and is no longer recommended
Epinephrine: 1mg IV q3-5 min (or vasopressin*)
Atropine: 1mg IV q 3-5 min (up to 3 doses)
38. Consider Causes: 6H’s Hypovolemia
Hypoxia
Hyper, hypokalemia
Hydrogen ions (acidosis)
Hypothermia
Hypoglycemia
39. 5T’s Toxins
Tamponade, cardiac
Tension pneumothorax
Thrombosis (pulmonary, coronary)
Trauma
40. PEA Thinking of and correcting one of the reversible causes of PEA early (eg chest tube placement for pneumothorax) can be lifesaving
41. Improving Survival After Cardiac Arrest After restoration of spontaneous circulation, poor neurologic outcome is one of major causes of death
2 studies have now demonstrated improved neurologic outcome post arrest with the use of mild hypothermia
42. Mild Hypothermia after VF Arrest 136 patients comatose after VF arrest (the arrest was witnessed) were randomized to mild hypothermia, target 32-34 C measured with a bladder probe. Patients were sedated with fentanyl and midazolam and paralyzed with pancuronium and temperature was maintained for 32 hours
45. ACLS: Management of Tachycardias and Bradycardias
46. Bradycardia and Tachycardia Algorithms The main important point is the distinction between stable vs unstable with serious signs and sx including:
Hypotension
Shock
Pulmonary edema
Loss of consciousness, confusion agitation
MI , angina
47. Tachycardia with a Pulse Main distinction is wide vs narrow complex tachycardia. Also consider LV function.
Assume wide complex tachycardia is VT and treat with amiodarone, lidocaine or procaineamide if stable or synchronized cardioversion if unstable
Synchronized cardioversion: sedate first, start with 100j
48. Wide Complex Tachycardia Always assume it is VT
The drugs of choice for stable VT or wide complex tachycardia of unknown origin are amiodarone and procaineamide
Adenosine and verapamil are contraindicated for the treatment of wide complex tachycardia
49. Narrow Complex Tachycardia Identify the rhythm (carotid massage, adenosine), consider cause, duration, LV function
Tachycardia may be secondary to fever, dehydration, hypoxemia-treat the underlying cause rather than the rhythm
No cardioversion for: sinus tachycardia, MAT, junctional tachycardia
Avoid using > one drug
50. Atrial Flutter-Fibrillation >48h Agents that control rate rather than convert the rhythm are preferred, unless the patient is adequately anticoagulated
Normal LV function: diltiazem or beta blockers (I)
Abnormal LV function(EF<40%): digoxin, diltiazem or amiodarone (use 1) (IIb)
51. Atrial Fibrillation <48h Consider cardioversion
Normal LV function: IIa: ibutilide, amiodarone, flecainide, procaineamide, propafenone
Abnormal LV function: IIb: amiodarone
52. Bradycardia If hypotensive, prepare for pacing
Transcutaneous pacing as a bridge
Use drugs to support blood pressure: dopamine or epinephrine drip
Never give iv bolus epinephrine for bradycardia with pulse unless you give tiny doses (0.1mg)
53. Avoid Panic on the First Day of Internship Learn the basics of ACLS including drug doses