resus and aed

18
Resuscitation & AED By Bradley Anton Brighton and Sussex Medical School

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Page 1: Resus and AED

Resuscitation & AED

By Bradley Anton Brighton and Sussex Medical School

Page 2: Resus and AED

Session Contents

Objectives Introduction – Resus Council 2010 Primary Survey & CPR (BLS) Chain of Survival AED Statistics & Findings Definitions AED Procedures Using an AED for observation Questions

Page 3: Resus and AED

Objectives

To be able to:

1. Perform a primary survey & CPR in line with the current Resuscitation Council guidelines.

2. Use or be familiar with the use of an AED in an effectively managed resuscitation scenario.

Page 4: Resus and AED

BLS Get AED when getting help. Chest Compression depth 5-6cm. Chest Compression rate 100-120/min.

HARDER – DEEPER – FASTER Rescue breaths delivered over 1 second, do not take

more than 5 seconds for 2 breaths. DO NOT stop CPR unless signs of life present AND

breathing normally. AED training encouraged but not restrictive.

Page 5: Resus and AED

Primary Survey Danger – to? Response – establish AVPU

Shout for HELP Airway – head tilt/chin lift unless? Breathing – Look, Listen, Feel up to 10

secondsSend or go for help – 999/112 and AED

Circulation – major bleed check

Page 6: Resus and AED

Resuscitation - adult

• 999/112/AED

• 30 chest compressions

• two rescue breaths

• continue 30:2.

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Chain of Survival

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What increases survival? Witnessed cardiac arrest. Casualty in shockable rhythm. Effective CPR started within 4 minutes. AED used within 8 minutes.

Hospital discharge of 1676 patients in Scotland43% shocked within 4 minutes30% shocked within 5-9 minutes5% shocked within 10-14 minutes

Page 9: Resus and AED

Early DefibrillationThe scientific evidence to support early defibrillation is overwhelming; the delay from collapse to delivery of the first shock is the single most important determinant of survival. If defibrillation is delivered promptly, survival rates as high as 75% have been reported. The chances of successful defibrillation decline at a rate of about 10% with each minute of delay; basic life support will help to maintain a shockable rhythm but is not a definitive treatment.

Taken from the Resusatation Council Guide - Use of AEDs

Page 10: Resus and AED

Definition of terms What is the heart? What energy powers the heart? Cardiac Arrest Heart Attack (Myocardial Infarction) Normal heart rhythm Shockable/Non Shockable rhythms Fibrillation (VF)/Defibrillation

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Heart Rhythms

Page 12: Resus and AED

Heart Rhythms

Page 13: Resus and AED

Group Work1. Contents of AED

2. Safety Considerations/Cautions for use

3. Preparing the Chest/Applying Pads

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AED Protocols Primary Survey/Begin continued CPR Establish history Turn on AED Prepare Chest/Attach Pads Follow instruction prompts - Only stop CPR when shocking/analysing Handover

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Pad placement

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AED Monitoring Why monitor/what does it mean? Which AEDs can monitor? What are they looking for? What assistance might be required?

Page 17: Resus and AED

AED Monitoring

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Thanks for listening!

Any questions?

If anyone thinks of any more questions then feel free to see me afterwards or email me [email protected]