Emergency Medicine Department, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC, United States.
Emergency Medicine Department, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC, United States.
Am J Emerg Med. 2019 Apr;37(4):751-756. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2019.01.051. Epub 2019 Jan 29.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) remains the key intervention following cardiac arrest because of its ability to continue circulation. Recent focus on high quality compressions during CPR has coincided with more frequent encounters of CPR Induced Consciousness (CPRIC). CPRIC represents a poorly understood patient experience during CPR and defined as signs of consciousness and pain perception during CPR.
Articles were selected using PubMed, MEDLINE, CINAHL and Scopus search for the keywords "cardiopulmonary resuscitation", "consciousness", "awareness", "resuscitation", "cardio-cerebral resuscitation", "agitation" and "patient experience" yielding 336 articles. Results and their references were assessed for relevance. Articles were filtered by English language and the keyword. Case reports and case series were included. All remaining articles were reviewed and findings were discussed.
A total of ten articles were selected, which included data on 123 cases. Sample size varied per study from 1 to 112. Studies included cases of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and in hospital cardiac arrest. Compressions were manually provided in most cases. Patient total recall was reported in 40% of cases. Use of sedation was reported in 40% of cases.
There is need for continued research to better describe, explain and manage the phenomena of CPRIC. From the articles reviewed here, it is clear that further investigation has the potential to properly elucidate the patient experience including lasting psychological effects of CPRIC. Importantly, there is need for more than recognition of CPRIC from national authorities. Future research efforts should focus on establishing guidelines for the use of sedation and physical restraints, as well as the potential impact of treating CPRIC on survival.
心肺复苏(CPR)仍然是心脏骤停后的关键干预措施,因为它能够维持循环。最近,CPR 期间的高质量按压受到了更多关注,同时 CPR 诱导意识(CPRIC)的发生率也有所增加。CPRIC 代表了 CPR 期间患者意识体验的一个尚未被充分理解的现象,其定义为 CPR 期间的意识和疼痛感知迹象。
使用 PubMed、MEDLINE、CINAHL 和 Scopus 搜索关键词“心肺复苏”、“意识”、“意识”、“复苏”、“心肺复苏”、“躁动”和“患者体验”,共检索到 336 篇文章。评估结果及其参考文献的相关性。通过英语语言和关键词筛选文章。纳入病例报告和病例系列。审查所有剩余的文章并讨论发现。
共选择了 10 篇文章,其中包括 123 例患者的数据。每项研究的样本量从 1 例到 112 例不等。研究包括院外心脏骤停和院内心脏骤停的病例。大多数情况下,按压由人工提供。40%的病例报告了患者的总回忆。40%的病例报告使用了镇静剂。
需要继续研究以更好地描述、解释和管理 CPRIC 现象。从这里回顾的文章中可以清楚地看出,进一步的调查有可能正确阐明患者的体验,包括 CPRIC 的持久心理影响。重要的是,国家当局不仅需要认识到 CPRIC。未来的研究工作应集中在制定镇静和身体约束使用的指南,以及治疗 CPRIC 对生存率的潜在影响。