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A 45-year-old male with a history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, amphetamine and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) use, and coronary vasospasm presented to triage with chest pain. During assessment, the patient reported that a left heart catheterization six months prior indicated spasms but no coronary artery disease.
They started CPR. He was defibrillated into VT. He then underwent dual sequential defibrillation into asystole. But cardiac arrest is a period of near zero flow in the coronary arteries and causes SEVERE ischemia. See these related cases: Cardiac arrest, defibrillated, diffuse ST depression and ST Elevation in aVR.
There was no bystander CPR. He was defibrillated, but they also noticed that he was being internally defibrillated and then found that he had an implantable ICD. He was unidentified and there were no records available After 7 shocks, he was successfully defibrillated and brought to the ED. An elderly man collapsed.
The paramedics achieve return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) after CPR, advanced cardiac life support (ALCS), and Intubation. Defibrillation is the treatment of choice in these cases but does not often result in sustained ROSC ( Kudenchuk et al 2006). She has a history of hypertension and non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus.
She was unable to be defibrillated but was cannulated and placed on ECMO in our Emergency Department (ECLS - extracorporeal life support). ECMO Flow was achieved after approximately 1 hour of high quality CPR. After good ECMO flow was established, she was successfully defibrillated. Angiography showed normal coronaries.
Indication for emergency invasive coronary angiography or had coronary angiography within 1 hour of arrival. Known obstructive coronary artery disease or known coronary stent. Known cardiac defibrillator. Excluded: Obvious cause for OHCA prior to SDCT or on hospital arrival. Pre-existing DNR order.
Emergent coronary angiography is not recommended over a delayed or selective strategy in patients with ROSC after cardiac arrest in the absence of ST-segment elevation, shock, electrical instability, signs of significant myocardial damage, and ongoing ischemia (Level 3: no benefit). COR 2b, LOE C-LD. COR 3, No benefit, LOE B-R.
More past history: hypertension, tobacco use, coronary artery disease with two vessel PCI to the right coronary artery and circumflex artery several years prior. VF was refractory to amiodarone, lidocaine, double-sequential defibrillation, esmolol, etc. It is unknown when this pain recurred and became constant.
He underwent further standard resuscitation EXCEPT that we applied the Inspiratory Threshold Device ( ResQPod ) AND applied Dual Sequential Defibrillation (this simply means we applied 2 sets of pads, had 2 defib machines, and defibrillated with both with only a fraction of one second separating each defibrillation.
It was witnessed, and CPR was performed by trained individuals. She was found to be in ventricular fibrillation and was defibrillated 8 times without a single, even transient, conversion out of fibrillation. She arrived in the ED 37 minutes after 911 was called, with continuing CPR. References : 1. Nikus KC, Eskola MJ.
The assay at my institution, for example, is frequently negative until 4-6 hours after acute coronary occlusion. After the second defibrillation the patient had an organized rhythm: Bradycardic escape/agonal rhythm, with large ST deviations. This rhythm reportedly produced no palpable pulse, and CPR was continued.
Medics found her apneic and pulseless, began CPR, and she was found to be in asystole. She was never seen to be in ventricular fibrillation and was never defibrillated. Rather it is due to coronary insufficiency due to a tight left main or 3-vessel disease with inadequate coronary flow. BP gradually rose.
CPR was started immediately. She was never defibrillated. As was seen in this case — defibrillation and/or overdrive pacing may be needed. A 60-something woman presented after a witnessed cardiac arrest. EMS arrived and found her in a wide complex PEA rhythm.
CPR was initiated immediately. It was reportedly a PEA arrest; there was no recorded V Fib and no defibrillation. After approximately 1 hour of total intermittent CPR time, final ROSC achieved.Patient did have extremity movement during central line placement.
12 minutes later, the patient went back into VFib arrest and underwent another 15 minutes of resuscitation followed by successful defibrillation and sustained ROSC. In total, he received approximately 40 minutes of CPR and 7 defibrillation attempts. Coronary spasm causing massive current of injury with shark fin ECG.
At cath, he immediately had incessant Torsades de Pointes requiring defibrillation 7 times and requiring placement of a transvenous pacer for overdrive pacing at a rate of 80. Over a 13-month period, serum potassium and magnesium levels were measured in 590 patients admitted to a coronary care unit. Armstrong, MD Arch Intern Med.
The arterial pressure waveform is transduced using the coronary catheter. Normally, the diameter of the coronary artery ostium is much greater than the diameter of the catheter so that catheter engagement does not significantly impair antegrade coronary perfusion. She was defibrillated perhaps 25 times.
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