EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - (Page 10) COVER STORY MARCH DELAYED DEFIBRILLATION: RESEARCH AND RESULTS Continued from cover What made you look into the topic of delayed defibrillation? What interested you about this topic? There has been a trend over the past decade in examining processes of care, and probably the most prominent one in the hospital setting is door-to-balloon time for ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Much research has also been done on out-of-hospital resuscitation, in terms of how quickly EMS could provide services to cardiac arrest victims in the field. However, very little is known about cardiac arrest inside the hospital. We knew there was a recommendation from the American Heart Association (AHA) to achieve prompt defibrillation within two minutes of cardiac arrest; we wanted to find out how reasonable that was, how achievable that was and what the impact of delays beyond two minutes would be for survival. In most hospitals across this country, outside of the intensive care unit, when nurses come across a patient in cardiac arrest they are not empowered to defibrillate them out of their life-threatening arrhythmia. patients who already had an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) implanted, and those patients who were receiving medications for cardiac arrhythmias. These medications included continuous infusions of epinephrine, amiodarone, lidocaine, or procainamide. Dr. Paul S. Chan, MD. Describe your patient selection. What patients from what hospital units were studied? Who was excluded, and why? We studied patient data from the National Registry of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (NRCPR). Specifically, we examined in-hospital cardiac arrests that were caused by ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia. We excluded patients who had cardiac arrest due to asystole or pulseless mechanical activity, which do not respond to defibrillation. It is important to note that we also only included those patients whose first identified rhythm was ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia; sometimes patients are in cardiac arrest from ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation, but their first rhythm might have been asystole or some other rhythm, so those patients were not considered. Only the patients whose first identified rhythm was ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia were included in this study. The hospital units we looked at included the intensive care units, the telemetry-monitored hospital units where patients were monitored 24 hours a day, and the unmonitored floors, primarily general medical or surgical floors.We did not include cardiac arrest patients who had their cardiac arrest during procedures (e.g., during surgery, right after surgery or in the recovery area) or during cardiac procedures like catheterizations or ablation therapy. We also excluded Explain your findings. What were the most common characteristics that determined delayed defibrillation? Were you surprised by the data? There were two main findings. The first was seeing who was more likely to have delays in defibrillation and what the impact of delay was on patient survival. The patients who experienced delayed defibrillation tended to cluster into two types of characteristics: being of black race and being admitted with a noncardiac admitting diagnosis (e.g., pneumonia). There were other hospital level characteristics that were associated with delays, including being admitted at a small hospital (i.e., under 250 beds), having a cardiac arrest in the middle of the night (i.e., after 5 p.m. and before 8 a.m.) or on the weekends, and being in an unmonitored hospital unit. The other primary finding was looking at the impact of delayed defibrillation. We found that 30 percent of the study population had delays in their defibrillation time (i.e., beyond two minutes). That is not surprising in the sense that we expected a certain number of patients to have delays, but we didn’t know what the actual number would be. In addition, the hospitals that participate in the NRCPR are involved in an active ongoing quality assessment, so in effect, the actual rates of delays may be much higher than 30 percent, because these hospitals are likely among the higher performing hospitals. We also found that patients who had delays in defibrillation time were half as likely to survive to discharge from the hospital than patients who had prompt defibrillation within two minutes. In addition, of those patients who had delays in defibrillation who survived to being discharged, their chances of surviving without major neurologic or functional damage were significantly less. Another interesting thing we found when analyzing this from a minute-tominute aspect was that it really didn’t matter whether or not there was a cutoff of two minutes or three minutes — ultimately it was a matter of time. So the faster patients were defibrillated, the better their outcomes, regardless of which comparisons of minutes we were studying. What do hospitals need to do to improve defibrillation times — include more AEDs, more staff, etc.? I believe this article has done a good job of describing the epidemiology of this problem — how extensive it is, how pervasive it is, and what its impact on survival is. However, as you’ve pointed out, it is important to not only discuss what the epidemiology is, but what the potential solutions are. In effect, we really do not know what the real solutions are, but we can speculate as to what may make a huge difference in survival. I tend to think of it as both a logistics and a technology issue. As Dr. Leslie Saxon pointed out, we have the technology available in the form of automated external defibrillators (AEDs). These defibrillators can read and shock patients in a very efficient manner. We also have this technology in existing defibrillator systems in the hospital, so technology is not the issue. It seems that this is more an issue of logistics, but what type of logistics are we talking about? In most hospitals across this country, outside of the intensive care unit, when nurses come across a patient in cardiac arrest they are not empowered to defibrillate them out of their life-threatening arrhythmia.They can start CPR, call a code, and bring other staff to the patient’s bedside, but in most hospitals the only ones who are allowed to shock patients are physicians or members of the code team. Unfortunately, even though a nurse is able to administer CPR, this may not be adequate. So the question is: why can we empower laypeople to use AEDs in public places but not empower nurses to defibrillate? If you think about it, not having an AED in a patient’s room is not the issue, although it may play a role — in fact, the longest delay in time is between when a person encounters a patient in cardiac arrest to the time it takes to find an appropriate hospital staff member who can perform the defibrillation. Therefore, that is the most important question: does this makes a huge difference in time? We believe that it probably will, although we don’t know for sure at this time. There has also been a discussion on AED use. There are hospitals that have implemented a more generous availability of AEDs — maybe not in every room, but certainly in hospital units that don’t have monitored patients. The AEDs are located along the hallway corridors of the hospital, making the transition of calling a code and bringing a defibrillator that is not as hefty into the patient’s room much easier. Of course, even if AEDs are more available, you also need to make sure that staff are familiar with their use. Administering treatment with an AED is not simply just having an AED and hoping for the best; people have to know how to use them and how to apply them to a patient’s chest, so there is going to be an educational component involved in their use.
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of EP Lab Digest - March 2008 EP Lab Digest - March 2008 ECG 101: The Case of a Dizzy Patient with a Left Bundle Branch Block Delayed Defibrillation: Research and Results Interview with Paul S. Chan, MD Contents Letter from the Editor Spotlight Interview: St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center Parent Heart Watch from 36,000 Feet… Perspectives from the Annual Leadership Conference Clinical Trial Overview: 2008 Are MRI-Safe Pacemakers and Leads on the Horizon? Q & A with J. Rod Gimbel, MD Navigating Tortuous Coronary Sinus Anatomy Using a Bipolar Lead Email Discussion Group: March 2008 Guidelines on ECG Interpretation Spotlight Interview Update: What Have We Learned? The Value of Educating Staff Events Calendar Industry News and Products Classifieds Advertisers Index In Memoriam EP Lab Digest - March 2008 EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Delayed Defibrillation: Research and Results Interview with Paul S. Chan, MD (Page 1) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Delayed Defibrillation: Research and Results Interview with Paul S. Chan, MD (Page 2) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Delayed Defibrillation: Research and Results Interview with Paul S. Chan, MD (Page BRC1) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Delayed Defibrillation: Research and Results Interview with Paul S. Chan, MD (Page BRC2) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Contents (Page 3) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 4) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 5) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 6) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 7) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 8) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 9) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 10) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 11) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview: St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center (Page 12) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview: St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center (Page 13) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview: St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center (Page 14) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview: St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center (Page 15) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview: St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center (Page 16) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Parent Heart Watch from 36,000 Feet… Perspectives from the Annual Leadership Conference (Page 17) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Parent Heart Watch from 36,000 Feet… Perspectives from the Annual Leadership Conference (Page 18) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Parent Heart Watch from 36,000 Feet… Perspectives from the Annual Leadership Conference (Page 19) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Parent Heart Watch from 36,000 Feet… Perspectives from the Annual Leadership Conference (Page 20) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Parent Heart Watch from 36,000 Feet… Perspectives from the Annual Leadership Conference (Page 21) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Parent Heart Watch from 36,000 Feet… Perspectives from the Annual Leadership Conference (Page 22) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Parent Heart Watch from 36,000 Feet… Perspectives from the Annual Leadership Conference (Page 23) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Clinical Trial Overview: 2008 (Page 24) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Clinical Trial Overview: 2008 (Page BRC3) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Clinical Trial Overview: 2008 (Page BRC4) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Clinical Trial Overview: 2008 (Page 25) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Clinical Trial Overview: 2008 (Page 26) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Clinical Trial Overview: 2008 (Page 27) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Are MRI-Safe Pacemakers and Leads on the Horizon? Q & A with J. Rod Gimbel, MD (Page 28) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Are MRI-Safe Pacemakers and Leads on the Horizon? Q & A with J. Rod Gimbel, MD (Page 29) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Are MRI-Safe Pacemakers and Leads on the Horizon? Q & A with J. Rod Gimbel, MD (Page 30) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Are MRI-Safe Pacemakers and Leads on the Horizon? Q & A with J. Rod Gimbel, MD (Page 31) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Are MRI-Safe Pacemakers and Leads on the Horizon? Q & A with J. Rod Gimbel, MD (Page 32) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Are MRI-Safe Pacemakers and Leads on the Horizon? Q & A with J. Rod Gimbel, MD (Page 33) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Navigating Tortuous Coronary Sinus Anatomy Using a Bipolar Lead (Page 34) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Navigating Tortuous Coronary Sinus Anatomy Using a Bipolar Lead (Page 35) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Navigating Tortuous Coronary Sinus Anatomy Using a Bipolar Lead (Page 36) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Navigating Tortuous Coronary Sinus Anatomy Using a Bipolar Lead (Page 37) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Email Discussion Group: March 2008 (Page 38) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Email Discussion Group: March 2008 (Page 39) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Guidelines on ECG Interpretation (Page 40) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Guidelines on ECG Interpretation (Page 41) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Guidelines on ECG Interpretation (Page 42) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Guidelines on ECG Interpretation (Page 43) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview Update: What Have We Learned? (Page 44) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview Update: What Have We Learned? (Page 45) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview Update: What Have We Learned? (Page 46) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Spotlight Interview Update: What Have We Learned? (Page 47) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - The Value of Educating Staff (Page 48) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - The Value of Educating Staff (Page 49) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - The Value of Educating Staff (Page 50) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - The Value of Educating Staff (Page 51) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 52) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 53) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 54) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 55) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 56) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 57) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 58) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 59) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Classifieds (Page 60) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - Classifieds (Page 61) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - In Memoriam (Page 62) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - In Memoriam (Page 63) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - In Memoriam (Page 64) EP Lab Digest - March 2008 - In Memoriam (Page BRC5)
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