Early Defibrillation and the EMT-Basic

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Early Defibrillation and the EMT-Basic Temple College EMS Professions

description

Early Defibrillation and the EMT-Basic. Temple College EMS Professions. Rationale. Most frequent initial rhythm in adult cardiac arrest: ventricular fibrillation. Rationale. Most effective treatment for VF: defibrillation. Rationale. Increased VF time = Decreased survival probability. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Early Defibrillation and the EMT-Basic

Page 1: Early Defibrillation and the EMT-Basic

Early Defibrillation and the EMT-Basic

Temple CollegeEMS Professions

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Rationale

Most frequent initial rhythm in adult cardiac arrest: ventricular fibrillation

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Rationale

Most effective treatment for VF: defibrillation

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Rationale

Increased VF time = Decreased survival probability

1 minute of VF = ~10% decrease in chance

of survival

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Rationale

BLS cannot convert VF to normal sinus rhythm

BLS only increases time available to defibrillate

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Principle of Early Defibrillation

All personnel who respond to cardiac arrests must be trained to

operate, equipped with, and permitted to operate a defibrillator

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Automatic External Defibrillators

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AED Definition

External defibrillator that incorporates rhythm analysis system

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AED Types

Fully Automatic

Semi- Automatic

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Operational Steps

Assess scene, patient Confirm cardiac arrest Turn on power Attach device Initiate rhythm analysis Deliver shock if indicated

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Standard Procedures

Assess scene for safety• Water• Explosive atmosphere• Patient on conductive surfaces

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Standard Procedures

Do NOT use AED if patient is:< 8 years old

Weighs < 55 pounds

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Standard Procedures

Assess patient• ABCs• Presence of transdermal medication

patches (nitro patches) Confirm arrest

• Unresponsive• Apneic• Pulseless

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Standard Procedures

Start BLS Attach defibrillator Do NOT waste time setting up O2,

suction, IVs, etc. Place pads in Lead 2 position

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Standard Procedures

Stop CPR, analyze rhythm Avoid patient contact during

analysis If machine says “shock,”

• “Clear” patient• Deliver shock• Immediately reanalyze

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Persistent VF

3 “stacked” shocks, no pulse checks in between

If unsuccessful, 1 minute of CPR Then if no pulse present, 3 more

“stacked” shocks

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Persistent VF

Always shock in sets of 3 Whenever chest is touched after

initial assessment, it should be to perform CPR for 1 minute

Continue to shock until “no shock indicated” message received

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Post-Resuscitation Care

Continue to support airway, ventilation

Supplemental O2

Clear airway if vomiting occurs Monitor vitals Stabilize, transport, meet ACLS

team

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Skill Maintenance

Practice• Drill at least monthly• Rotate responsibility for checking

machine

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Quality Assurance

Case-by-case review of AED use• Written report• Voice/ECG recording• Code summary tapes

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Quality Assurance

System• Frequency of use• Success rates• Early defibrillation may not be

effective in systems with• Long response times• No bystander CPR• Delayed ALS follow-up

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Public Access Defibrillation

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Summary

Shock Early and Shock Often!