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Perfusion NewswireMain ZoneThe Incidence of “Load & Go” Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Candidates for Emergency Department Utilization of Emergency Extracorporeal Life Support: A One-Year Review

The Incidence of “Load & Go” Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Candidates for Emergency Department Utilization of Emergency Extracorporeal Life Support: A One-Year Review

BACKGROUND: 

The outcome of patients after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is poor and gets worse after prolonged resuscitation. Recently introduced attempts like an early installed emergency extracorporeal life support (E-ECLS) in patients with persisting cardiac arrest at the emergency department (ED) are tried. The “Vienna Cardiac Arrest Registry” (VICAR) was introduced August 2013 to collect Utstein-style data. The aim of this observational study was to identify the incidence of patients which fulfill “load&go”-criteria for E-ECLS at the ED.

METHODS: 

VICAR was retrospectively analyzed for following criteria: age <75 years; witnessed OHCA; basic life support; ventricular fibrillation/ventricular tachycardia; no return-of-spontaneous-circulation (ROSC) within 15min of advanced-life-support, which were supposed as potential optimal criteria for "load&go" plus successful E-ECLS treatment at the ED. The observation period was from August 1, 2013 to July 31, 2014.

RESULTS: 

Over 948 OHCA patients registered during the study period; data were exploitable for 864 patients. Of all patients, “load&go”-criteria were fulfilled by 55 (6%). However, 96 (11%) were transported with on-going CPR to the ED. Of these 96 patients, only 16 (17%) met the “load&go”-criteria. Similarly, among the 96 patients, 12 adults were treated with E-ECLS at the ED, with only 5 meeting the criteria. Among these 12 patients, favourable neurological outcome (CPC 1/2) was obtained in 1 patient without criteria.

CONCLUSION: 

Further promotion of these criteria within the ambulance crews is needed. May be these criteria could serve as a decision support for emergency physicians/paramedics, which patients to transport with on-going CPR to the ED for E-ECLS.


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