Abstract

Prehospital bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was studied to determine if it affected the outcome of defibrillation. Four hundred twenty-one consecutive witnessed cardiopulmonary arrests presenting with the initial rhythm of coarse ventricular fibrillation treated by the Milwaukee County Paramedic System from January 1980 to June 1982 were analyzed. Pediatric, trauma, and poisoning patients and those receiving intravenous or endotracheal medications before defibrillation (58) were excluded. Immediate professional bystander CPR (physician, nurse, EMT) and citizen bystander CPR were compared to a control group receiving no bystander CPR until arrival of EMS personnel. A successful defibrillation occurred if defibrillation prior to administration of medication produced an effective cardiac rhythm with pulses. Eighty-eight of the 363 remaining patients (24%) converted with initial defibrillations. While the group receiving professional bystander CPR had a higher successful defibrillation rate than did the no-CPR group (35% vs 22%, P less than .04), citizen bystander CPR and no-CPR groups had similar successful defibrillation rates (24% vs 22%, no significant difference). One hundred eighty-six of the 363 patients (51%) were transported to a hospital with a rhythm and a pulse (a successful resuscitation). Ninety-seven of the 363 patients (27%) were discharged alive from the hospital (a save). Patients who were converted successfully using initial "quick-look" defibrillations were far more likely to be successfully resuscitated (79/88 [90%] vs 107/275 [39%], P greater than .0001) and to be discharged alive from the hospital (54/88 [61%] vs 43/275 [16%], P greater than .0001) than were those who required further advanced cardiac life support techniques.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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