Varney Joseph, Motawea Karam R, Mostafa Mostafa R, AbdelQadir Yossef H, Aboelenein Merna, Kandil Omneya A, Ibrahim Nancy, Hashim Hashim T, Murry Kimberly, Jackson Garrett, Shah Jaffer, Boury Maty, Awad Ahmed K, Patel Priya, Awad Dina M, Rozan Samah S, Talat Nesreen E
School of Medicine American University of the Caribbean Philipsburg Sint Maarten (Dutch Part).
Faculty of Medicine Alexandria University Alexandria Egypt.
Health Sci Rep. 2022 May 24;5(3):e644. doi: 10.1002/hsr2.644. eCollection 2022 May.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in full-coded patients requires effective chest compressions with minimal interruptions to maintain adequate perfusion to the brain and other vital organs. Many novel approaches have been proposed to attain better organ perfusion compared to traditional CPR techniques. The purpose of this review is to investigate the safety and efficacy of heads-up CPR versus supine CPR.
We searched PubMed Central, SCOPUS, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases from 1990 to February 2021. After the full-text screening of 40 eligible studies, only seven studies were eligible for our meta-analysis. We used the RevMan software (5.4) to perform the meta-analysis.
In survival outcome, the pooled analysis between heads-up and supine CPR was (risk ratio = 0.98, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.17-5.68, = 0.98). The pooled analyses between heads-up CPR and supine CPR in cerebral flow, cerebral perfusion pressure and coronary perfusion pressure outcomes, were (mean difference [MD] = 0.10, 95% CI = 0.03-0.17, = 0.003), (MD = 12.28, 95% CI = 5.92-18.64], = 0.0002), and (MD = 8.43, 95% CI = 2.71-14.14, = 0.004), respectively. After doing a subgroup analysis, cerebral perfusion was found to increase during heads-up CPR compared with supine CPR at 6 min CPR duration and 18 to 20 min CPR duration as well.
Our study suggests that heads-up CPR is associated with better cerebral and coronary perfusion compared to the conventional supine technique in pigs' models. However, more research is warranted to investigate the safety and efficacy of the heads-up technique on human beings and to determine the best angle for optimization of the technique results.
对病情严重需全力抢救的患者进行心肺复苏(CPR)时,需要进行有效的胸外按压且尽量减少中断,以维持对大脑和其他重要器官的充足灌注。与传统的心肺复苏技术相比,人们提出了许多新方法以实现更好的器官灌注。本综述的目的是研究抬头心肺复苏与仰卧位心肺复苏的安全性和有效性。
我们检索了1990年至2021年2月的PubMed Central、SCOPUS、Web of Science和Cochrane数据库。在对40项符合条件的研究进行全文筛选后,仅有7项研究符合我们的荟萃分析要求。我们使用RevMan软件(5.4)进行荟萃分析。
在生存结局方面,抬头心肺复苏与仰卧位心肺复苏的汇总分析结果为(风险比=0.98,95%置信区间[CI]=0.17-5.68,P=0.98)。抬头心肺复苏与仰卧位心肺复苏在脑血流、脑灌注压和冠状动脉灌注压结局方面的汇总分析结果分别为(平均差[MD]=0.10,95%CI=0.03-0.17,P=0.003)、(MD=12.28,95%CI=5.92-18.64,P=0.0002)和(MD=8.43,95%CI=2.71-14.14,P=0.004)。在进行亚组分析后发现,与仰卧位心肺复苏相比,在心肺复苏持续6分钟以及18至20分钟时,抬头心肺复苏期间脑灌注增加。
我们的研究表明,在猪模型中,与传统的仰卧位技术相比,抬头心肺复苏能带来更好的脑灌注和冠状动脉灌注。然而,有必要开展更多研究以调查抬头技术对人类的安全性和有效性,并确定优化该技术效果的最佳角度。