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From:
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2006 10:02
AM
To:
UAHEALTHNET@LISTSERV.ARIZONA.EDU
Subject: New CPR Saves Life of
New CPR Saves Life of
From: Beth Tucker (520) 626-5540
or
May 17, 2006
Jo Marie Gellerman (520)
626-7219
When his plane touched down at
A combination of Dr. Dahle’s medical emergency
training, a new approach to CPR called Cardiocerebral Resuscitation (CCR) and
the use of an Automated External Defibrillator saved the life of a 54-year-old
man who fell to the floor gasping for air and clenching his
chest.
“I was walking through the baggage claim area when a man
collapsed 30 feet away from me,” Dr. Dahle recalls. “Instantly, four
bystanders had their cell phones out and began discussing whether they should
call 911 or not. I told two of them to call, and sent someone else to get
an AED.”
Next, Dr. Dahle felt for a pulse and found nothing.
“I started chest compressions and after I had pumped on the chest
50 times or so, someone showed up with the AED,” Dr. Dahle said.
An
off-duty
Dr. Dahle and the
firefighter asked bystanders to stand back and pushed the button. Shock.
“Still no pulse,” remembers Dr. Dahle. “So I resumed chest
compressions.”
After compressions and another shock from the
AED, the man took a deep breath and struggled to get up from the floor.
Paramedics arrived on scene shortly after and took him to a Valley
hospital.
Shortly before the second shock, a
“I informed him that wasn't necessary in
the first five minutes of arrest,” Dr. Dahle says, referring to research from
The University of Arizona Sarver Heart
Center.
Cardiocerebral Resuscitation emphasizes
continuous chest compressions and eliminates mouth-to-mouth ventilation for
cases of sudden unexpected collapse in adults.
“We found that the most important factor of survival is to keep the
blood moving through the body by continuous chest compressions,” says Gordon A. Ewy, MD, director of the
“We’re proud of Dr. Dahle’s quick thinking and use of his
emergency training outside of the hospital,” said Harvey Meislin, MD, Professor and Head of
Emergency Medicine at The University of Arizona’s
The
Department of Emergency Medicine’s residency program, under the direction of Sam
Keim, MD, is one of the top-rated programs in the nation.
The Scottsdale
Fire Department is one of several fire departments in the state to have recently
adopted the new approach to CPR, working in close cooperation with the
“What happened at
As a cause of death,
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is second only to all cancer deaths combined,
taking the lives of 490,000 Americans every year. Surveys have shown that four
out of five individuals will not initiate bystander CPR, most often because of
the aversion to mouth-to-mouth contact or fear of doing something
wrong.
“Chances of surviving cardiac arrest are better with
bystander-initiated CPR,” Dr. Ewy said. “If you call 911 and do nothing until
the paramedics arrive, the patient has almost no chance of leaving the hospital
alive. We expect Cardiocerebral Resuscitation to increase the willingness to
perform CPR, as it eliminates the need for mouth-to-mouth ventilation.”
Referring to the more than 2,500 automated external defibrillators
registered in
For more information:
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