With help from
bystanders, cardiac arrest outcomes improving
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[July 22, 2015]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - More people are stepping
up to the plate when they see others suffer cardiac arrest, according to
two new studies.
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And the increase in the number of bystanders providing
cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) has been tied to better outcomes
of the usually fatal condition, researchers report in JAMA.
"In terms of outcomes we saw survival with good brain function
increase by 37 percent, which is a very remarkable result," said Dr.
Carolina Malta Hansen of the Duke Clinical Research Institute in
Durham, North Carolina.
Hansen, the lead author of one of the studies, said a person in
cardiac arrest is practically dead. "Your heart is not beating to
allow circulation," she said.
Each year in the U.S., there are about 400,000 cardiac arrests
outside of hospitals that aren't related to injuries, according to
the American Heart Association. The Sudden Cardiac Arrest Foundation
says about nine out of 10 people with this kind of cardiac arrest
will die.
People in cardiac arrest need CPR to keep blood flowing throughout
the body, according to the Sudden Cardiac Arrest Foundation. Then
they need to be shocked into a proper rhythm with a defibrillator.
Without treatment, a person dies within minutes.
For their study, Hansen and colleagues used data on nearly 5,000
people who had cardiac arrest outside of a hospital from 2010
through 2013.
Overall, about 86 percent received CPR before emergency medical
services (EMS) arrived at the scene. About 46 percent received CPR
from a bystander while about 41 percent received it from a first
responder like a police officer or firefighter.
During those four years, the percent of people receiving CPR from a
bystander grew from about 39 percent to about 49 percent. There was
no difference in CPR performed by first responders or EMS over that
period.
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Over the course of the study, the number of people who survived
without significant brain damage increased from 7.1 percent to 9.7
percent.
About 11 percent of those in cardiac arrest who received CPR from
bystanders survived without major brain damage - compared to about 8
percent of people who received CPR from first responders and 7
percent who received CPR from EMS.
In a separate study published in the same journal, Japanese
researchers who looked back at data on nearly 168,000
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest cases found that bystander responses
improved between 2005 and 2012.
The number of people who survived without significant brain damage
also increased, Dr. Shinji Nakahara of Kanagawa University of Human
Services in Yokosuka and colleagues report.
"Time is of the essence," said Dr. Venugopal Menon of the Cleveland
Clinic in Ohio. "Once the heart stops beating
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