Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support Post–Cardiac Surgery

Author(s):  
Caryl Bailey ◽  
Michael Faulkner

This chapter explores advanced cardiovascular life support (ACLS) after cardiac surgery. In 2009, the European Association of Cardiothoracic Surgeons provided recommendations for the management of post–cardiac surgery arrest, which have since been augmented by publication of consensus guidelines from the European Resuscitation Council in 2015 and the Society of Thoracic Surgeons in 2017. These guidelines are preferred over traditional ACLS guidelines for cardiac arrest resuscitation of post–cardiac surgery patients. Ventricular fibrillation is the cause of 25%–50% of cardiac arrests in post–cardiac surgery patients. Guidelines recommend up to 3 attempted shocks prior to external cardiac massage (ECM) if they can be delivered within 1 minute of arrest. Early defibrillation is often successful in this population and minimizes potential intrathoracic trauma from ECM on a fresh sternotomy. In patients with severe bradycardia or asystole, the epicardial pacer should be set to emergency mode, which provides dual-chamber, asynchronous pacing at 80–100 bpm with maximum atrial and ventricular amperage. Resternotomy within 5 minutes is recommended when resuscitation after cardiac arrest has been unsuccessful or when cardiac arrest from tamponade is highly likely.

Author(s):  
Moslem Abdelghafar ◽  
Taher Abdelmoiem ◽  
Alaa Mohamed ◽  
Mohamed Abdalla

Aim: Cardiac surgery patients have different resuscitative needs than other patients who experience in-hospital cardiac arrest, this was addressed in the guidelines. However, it is unknown how widely the guidelines are practiced, or a training protocol is followed in different cardiac surgery units in Egypt. Methods: A 21-question survey is created and included: Participants demographics, Prevalence of cardiac arrest, Cardiac arrest protocol, Emergency resternotomy technique, Training protocols. Survey was disseminated through social media messaging platforms during the period between November 2020 and January 2021. Results: 95 responses were from 11 centres across Egypt. 68.5% of the respondents were surgeons, 76.8% of participants were junior surgeons. For patients who go into VF after cardiac surgery, respondents would attempt a median of 3 shocks with only 24.2% commencing defibrillation shocks before external cardiac massage, while the majority initiating CPR immediately and performing emergency resternotomy in a median time of 10 mins. 56.8% would give 1 mg of adrenaline as soon the cardiac arrest was established. If a surgeon was not available, only 36.8% of respondents would allow any trained personnel to perform the emergency resternotomy. Only 9.5% practice regularly on emergency sternotomies. 75% think tailored training is important and staff should be oriented about it in the future. Conclusion: An action plan is required to improve the awareness of the junior surgeons with the Cardiac Advanced Life Support Protocol.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_D) ◽  
Author(s):  
Moslem Abdelghafar ◽  
Taher Abdelmoneim ◽  
Alaa Mohamed ◽  
Mohamed Abdalla

Abstract Introduction There has been an increasing recognition that cardiac surgery patients have different resuscitative needs than other medical and surgical patients who experience in-hospital cardiac arrest. This was addressed in the 2010 European Resuscitation Council Guidelines and the 2010 American Heart Association Guidelines. However, it’s unknown how widely the guidelines are practiced, or a training protocol is followed in different units in Egypt. Objectives This national survey aims to identify the views and common practice of Egyptian cardiac teams regarding resuscitation after cardiac surgery. Methods A 21-question survey is created based on a prior survey used by the EACTS guidelines committee. Questions included the following topics: Participants demographics, Prevalence of cardiac arrest in the intensive care unit, Cardiac arrest with ventricular fibrillation or non-shockable rhythm, Emergency resternotomy technique, Training and arrest protocols. Survey dissemination was through social media platforms, mobile messaging applications and emails during the time period between November 2020 and January 2021. Results Of 126 responses, 95 were suitable for inclusion. Responses were from 11 centres across Egypt. 68.5% of the respondents were surgeons while cardiac anaesthetists and intensivists formed 12.6% and 18.9% respectively. 76.8% of participants were middle-grade doctors, consultant participation was 23.2%. The median annual number of cases performed in the units was 480 and this ranged from 10 to 3000. The average percentage of cardiac arrests was 7%, Median survival to hospital discharge of all arrests was 33% For patients who go into VF after cardiac surgery, respondents would attempt a mean of 5 shocks with only 24.2% commencing defibrillation shocks before external cardiac massage, while the majority initiating CPR immediately. They would perform emergency resternotomy in a mean time of 12 mins and in 15 mins if the rhythm was not shockable. 56.8% would give 1 mg of adrenaline as soon the cardiac arrest was established, only 6.3% thought that it should be given rarely or not at all. If a surgeon was not immediately available 36.8% of respondents would be happy for any trained personnel to perform the emergency resternotomy while 58.9% expect only the surgeon to perform the resternotomy. 49.4% of the participants have not practised any training to perform an emergency sternotomy. 41% of the respondents state they occasionally practice or talk with the staff about it. Only 9.5% practice regularly on emergency sternotomies. 25% assume current training is enough and does not need modification, while 75% think tailored training is important and staff should be oriented about it in the future. Conclusion An action plan is required to improve the awareness of the junior surgeons with the Cardiac Advanced Life Support Protocol. Proper training of the intensive care staff to implement the protocol in a timely organised manner is needed. Assessment of the rhythm before starting external chest compressions is the corner stone in cardiac patients undergoing cardiac arrest. VF/pVT rhythm, 3 defibrillation shocks are given first; for the non- shockable rhythm, the emergency pacing switched on, this is followed by compressions till resternomtomy. Emergency resternotomy under 5 minutes is the only effective way to save patients with tamponade and extreme hypovolemia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 54-61
Author(s):  
Bhargavi Gali ◽  
◽  
Grace Arteaga ◽  
Glen Au ◽  
Vitaly Herasevich

Background: Advanced life support interventions have been modified for patients who have recently undergone sternotomy for cardiac surgery and have new suture lines. We aimed to determine whether the use of in-situ simulation increased adherence to the cardiac surgery unit-advanced life support algorithm (CSU-ALS) for patients with cardiac arrest after cardiac surgery (CAACS). Methods: This was a retrospective chart review of cardiac arrest management of patients who sustained CAACS before and after implementation of in-situ simulation scenarios utilizing CSU-ACLS in place of traditional advanced cardiac life support. We utilized classroom education of CSU-ACLS followed by in-situ high-fidelity simulated scenarios of patients with CAACS.. Interprofessional learners (n = 210) participated in 18 in-situ simulations of CAACS. Two groups of patients with CAACS were retrospectively compared before and after in situ training (preimplementation, n=22 vs postimplementation, n=38). Outcomes included adherence to CSU-ALS for resuscitation, delay in initiation of chest compressions, use of defibrillation and pacing before external cardiac massage, and time to initial medication. Results: Chest compressions were used less often in the postimplementation vs the preimplementation period (11/22 [29%] vs 13/38 [59%], P = 0.02). Time to initial medication administration, use of defibrillation and pacing, return to the operating room, and survival were similar between periods. Conclusion: In this pilot, adherence to a key component of the CSU-ALS algorithm—delaying initiation of chest compressions—improved


1962 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 71
Author(s):  
Sung In Song ◽  
Kwang Won Park ◽  
Hung Kun Oh ◽  
Ian S. Robb

2014 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 123-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheryl Herrmann

Cardiac arrest in the immediate postoperative recovery period in a patient who underwent cardiac surgery is typically related to reversible causes—tamponade, bleeding, ventricular arrhythmias, or heart blocks associated with conduction problems. When treated promptly, 17% to 79% of patients who experience cardiac arrest after cardiac surgery survive to discharge. The Cardiac Advanced Life Support–Surgical (CALS-S) guideline provides a standardized algorithm approach to resuscitation of patients who experience cardiac arrest after cardiac surgery. The purpose of this article is to discuss the CALS-S guideline and how to implement it.


1964 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
William F. Minogue ◽  
Andre A. Smessart ◽  
William J. Grace

2005 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 265-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Derek L. Isenberg ◽  
Richard Bissell

AbstractIntroduction:Emergency medical services have invested substantial resources to establish advanced life support (ALS) programs. However, it is unclear whether ALS care provides better outcomes to patients compared to basic life support (BLS) care.Objective:To evaluate the current evidence regarding the benefits of ALS.Methods:Electronic medical databases were searched to identify articles that directly compared ALS versus BLS care. A total of 455 articles were found. Articles were excluded for the following reasons: (1) the article was not written in English; (2) BLS response was not compared to an ALS response; (3) a physician or nurse was included as part of the ALS response; (4) it was an aeromedical response; or (5) defibrillation was included in the ALS, but not the BLS, scope of care. Twenty-one articles met the inclusion criteria for this literature review.Results:Results were divided into four categories: (1) trauma; (2) cardiac arrest; (3) myocardial infarction; and (4) altered mental status.Trauma:The majority of articles showed that ALS provided no benefits over BLS in urban trauma patients. In fact, most studies showed higher mortality rates for trauma patients receiving ALS care. Further research is needed to evaluate the benefits of ALS for rural trauma patients, and whether ALS care improves outcomes in subgroups of urban trauma patients.Cardiac Arrest:Cardiac arrest studies show that early CPR plus early defibrillation provide the greatest improvement in survival. However, most cardiac arrest research includes defibrillation as an ALS skill which has now moved into the BLS scope of care. The 2004 multi-center OPALS study provided good evidence that ALS does not improve cardiac arrest survival over early defibrillation. Further research is needed to address whether any ALS interventions improve cardiac arrest outcome.Myocardial Infarction:Only one study directly compared the outcome of BLS and ALS care on myocardial infarction. The study found no difference in outcomes between BLS and ALS care in an urban setting.Advanced Life Support:Only one study directly compared the outcome of BLS and ALS care on patients with altered mental status. The study found that the same number of patients had improved to “alert” on arrival at the emergency department, but there was a decreased length of emergency department stay for patients treated by ALS for hypoglycemia.Limitations:This review article does not take into account the benefits of ALS interventions, such as thrombolytics, dextrose, or nitroglycerin, since no studies directly compared these interventions to BLS care. Furthermore, only one study in this literature review was a large, multi-center trial.Conclusions:ALS shows little, if any, benefits for urban trauma patients. Cardiac arrest studies show that ALS does not provide additional benefits over BLS-defibrillation care, but more research is needed in this area. In two small studies, ALS care did not provide benefits over BLS care for patients with myocardial infarctions or altered mental status. Larger-scale studies are needed to evaluate which specific ALS interventions improve patient outcomes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 30-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Jill Ley

Of the 250 000 patients who undergo major cardiac operations in the United States annually, 0.7% to 2.9% will experience a postoperative cardiac arrest. Although Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) is the standard approach to management of cardiac arrest in the United States, it has significant limitations in these patients. The European Resuscitation Council (ERC) has endorsed a new guideline specific to resuscitation after cardiac surgery that advises important, evidence-based deviations from ACLS and is under consideration in the United States. The ACLS and ERC recommendations for resuscitation of these patients are contrasted on the basis of the essential components of care. Key to this approach is the rapid elimination of reversible causes of arrest, followed by either defibrillation or pacing (as appropriate) before external cardiac compressions that can damage the sternotomy, cautious use of epinephrine owing to potential rebound hypertension, and prompt resternotomy (within 5 minutes) to promote optimal cerebral perfusion with internal massage, if prior interventions are unsuccessful. These techniques are relatively simple, reproducible, and easily mastered in Cardiac Surgical Unit–Advanced Life Support courses. Resuscitation of patients after heart surgery presents a unique opportunity to achieve high survival rates with key modifications to ACLS that warrant adoption in the United States.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document