Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5999111 | Resuscitation | 2012 | 4 Pages |
ObjectiveWhile cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) chest compression fraction (CCF) is associated with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) outcomes, there is no standard method for the determination of CCF. We compared nine methods for calculating CCF.MethodsWe studied consecutive adult OHCA patients treated by Alabama Emergency Medical Services (EMS) agencies of the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium (ROC) during January 1, 2010 to October 28, 2010. Paramedics used portable cardiac monitors with real-time chest compression detection technology (LifePak 12, Physio-Control, Redmond, WA). We performed both automated CCF calculation for the entire care episode as well as manual review of CPR data in 1-min epochs, defining CCF as the proportion of each treatment interval with active chest compressions. We compared the CCF values resulting from 9 calculation methods: (1) mean CCF for the entire patient care episode (automated calculation by manufacturer software), (2) mean CCF for first 3Â min of patient care, (3) mean CCF for first 5Â min, (4) mean CCF for first 10Â min, (5) mean CCF for the entire episode except first 5Â min, (6) mean CCF for last 5Â min, (7) mean CCF from start to first shock, (8) mean CCF for the first half of resuscitation, and (9) mean CCF for the second half of resuscitation. We compared CCF for Methods 2-9 with Method 1 using paired t-tests with a Bonferroni-adjusted p-value of 0.006 (99.5% confidence intervals).ResultsAmong 102 adult OHCA, patient demographics were: mean age 60.3 years (SD 20.8 years), African American 56.9%, male 63.7%, and shockable ECG rhythm 23.5%. Mean CPR duration was 728Â s (95% CI: 647-809Â s). Mean CCF for the 9 CCF calculation methods were: (1) 0.587%; (2) 0.526%; (3) 0.541%; (4) 0.566%; (5) 0.562%; (6) 0.597%; (7) 0.530%; (8) 0.550%; and (9) 0.590%. Compared with Method 1, Method 7 CCF (start to first shock) was slightly lower (â0.057; 99.5% CI: â0.100 to â0.014). There were no other statistically significant CCF differences (range: â0.054 to 0.013). Correlation between CCF 2-9 and CCF varied (ÏÂ =Â 0.48-0.85).ConclusionCCF varies minimally with different calculation methods. Automated CCF determination may prove sufficient for evaluating CPR quality.