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Journal Article

Citation

Pionkowski RS, Thompson BM, Gruchow HW, Aprahamian C, Darin JC. Ann. Emerg. Med. 1983; 12(12): 733-738.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1983, American College of Emergency Physicians, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

6650939

Abstract

Length of resuscitation in prehospital ventricular fibrillation patients was studied to define its relationship to survival. Five hundred sixty-five patients presenting with the initial rhythm of ventricular fibrillation to the Milwaukee County Paramedic System between January 1978 and April 1982 were resuscitated successfully. Pediatric patients and patients with trauma, poisoning, and drowning were excluded. Of the 565 resuscitated patients, 262 (46%) were discharged alive and 303 (54%) died during hospitalization. For all 565 patients the resuscitation time and times from arrival of paramedics until the first sustained pulse were plotted against survival to define a curve. The curve demonstrated rapidly declining survival rates for resuscitation time up to 20 minutes; thereafter, survival declined more gradually with respect to resuscitation time. The mean resuscitation time for those eventually discharged alive was 12.6 minutes, which was statistically shorter (P less than .0001) than the mean resuscitation time of 23.9 minutes for those who eventually died. The overall survival curve of witnessed arrest patients was not statistically different from that of unwitnessed patients. The survival curve of those patients receiving bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was similar to the curve of those who received no CPR. We conclude that resuscitation time is a heretofore undefined significant predictor of survival of resuscitated prehospital ventricular fibrillation patients.


Language: en

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