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在模拟客机巡航高度缺氧条件下,胸外按压质量下降:一项随机、对照、双盲模拟人研究。

Chest compression quality decreases in hypoxic conditions simulating an airliner cabin at cruising altitude: a randomized, controlled, double-blind Manikin Study.

机构信息

Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital of Cologne, Kerpener Str. 62, 50937, Cologne, Germany.

Department of Sleep and Human Factors Research, Institute of Aerospace Medicine, German Aerospace Center, 51147, Cologne, Germany.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2024 Oct 29;14(1):25971. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-77149-4.

Abstract

Air traveler numbers are predicted to reach 4.0 billion in 2024. Between 1/15,000-50,000 passengers will experience acute medical problems inflight with cardiac arrests requiring cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) accounting for 0.3% of medical emergencies. Hypoxia in airplane cabins could impair oxygenation and physical performance of caregivers. We conducted a randomized controlled, double-blind study to test the hypothesis that hypoxia decreases the effectiveness in performing CPR. We randomized 24 healthcare professionals to two different study arms, each consisting of two conditions: arm (1) 'hypoxia (FiO 15%, equivalent to 2400 m altitude)' versus 'normoxia'; arm (2) 'hypoxia + supplemental oxygen' versus 'normoxia + supplemental oxygen'. The order of conditions was counterbalanced and a minimum wash-out period of 24 h was granted between conditions. In each condition participants performed a 5-min cardiac compression only CPR (CCO-CPR) using a full-body manikin after one, three and six hours in an altitude chamber. Mixed ANOVAs with post-hoc false-discovery-rate adjusted pairwise comparisons indicated that although compression frequency was maintained, the number of compressions with correct depth was decreased at all times during hypoxia compared to normoxia (all p < 0.002). After 6 h hypoxia exposure, mean compression depth was below the recommended compression depth defined by ERC/AHA guidelines and reduced compared to normoxia (42.4 ± 12.6 mm vs. 54.6 ± 4.3 mm, p < 0.0001). Supplemental oxygen during CCO-CPR in hypoxia prevented the decrease of compression-depth (55.3 ± 3 mm). Extended hypoxia exposure akin to conditions in airplane cabins can reduce quality of chest compressions during CPR. Supplemental oxygen for healthcare providers is an effective countermeasure.

摘要

预计到 2024 年,航空旅客人数将达到 40 亿。在 1/15000 到 50000 名乘客中,将有 0.3%的人会在飞行中出现急性医疗问题,需要进行心肺复苏术(CPR)。飞机客舱中的缺氧可能会影响护理人员的氧气供应和身体表现。我们进行了一项随机对照、双盲研究,以检验缺氧降低进行 CPR 效果的假设。我们将 24 名医疗保健专业人员随机分为两个不同的研究组,每组包括两种情况:组(1)“缺氧(FiO215%,相当于 2400 米海拔)”与“正常氧合”;组(2)“缺氧+补充氧气”与“正常氧合+补充氧气”。条件的顺序是平衡的,并且在条件之间给予至少 24 小时的最小洗脱期。在每种情况下,参与者在海拔室中 1、3 和 6 小时后,使用全身人体模型进行 5 分钟的仅心脏按压心肺复苏术(CCO-CPR)。混合方差分析与事后虚假发现率调整的成对比较表明,尽管压缩频率保持不变,但与正常氧合相比,在所有时间点缺氧时,具有正确深度的压缩次数都减少(所有 p<0.002)。在 6 小时的缺氧暴露后,平均压缩深度低于 ERC/AHA 指南定义的推荐压缩深度,并且与正常氧合相比有所降低(42.4±12.6mm 与 54.6±4.3mm,p<0.0001)。在 CCO-CPR 期间给予缺氧时的补充氧气可防止压缩深度降低(55.3±3mm)。类似于飞机客舱中条件的延长缺氧暴露会降低 CPR 期间的胸部按压质量。为医疗保健提供者提供补充氧气是一种有效的对策。

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