Dispatcher-Assisted Bystander CPR Best Choice For Possible Cardiac Arrest Signs

Dispatchers should assertively give cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) instructions to bystanders who suspect someone is in cardiac arrest because the benefits from correctly recommending CPR for someone who needs it greatly outweigh the risks from recommending CPR for someone who does not, researchers said in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.

Early Cooling In Cardiac Arrest May Improve Survival

Rapidly cooling a person in cardiac arrest may improve their chance of survival without brain damage, according to research presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2009.
“We now have a method that is safe and can be started within minutes of cardiac arrest to minimize damage during this very critical period,” said Maaret CastrĂ©n, [...]

Enrollment In Study On Resuscitation Methods For Cardiac Arrest Stopped By NHLBI

Enrollment has ended early in a large, multicenter clinical trial comparing two distinct resuscitation strategies delivered by emergency medical service (EMS) providers to increase blood flow during cardiac arrest. The study’s independent monitoring board and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), the lead sponsor of the study, stopped enrollment based on preliminary data [...]

Study Finds Less Than 1 In 3 Toronto Bystanders Who Witness A Cardiac Arrest Try To Help

Researchers at St. Michael’s Hospital working in conjunction with EMS services, paramedics and fire services across Ontario found that a bystander who attempts cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) can quadruple the survival rate to over 50 per cent. But Dr. Laurie Morrison and the research team at Rescu have found only 30 per cent of bystanders in [...]

New Class Of Molecules May Help Prevent Fatal Complication In Patients With Kidney Disease

Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine have made an important discovery about why potassium builds up to dangerous levels in the bloodstream, a relatively common medical problem that affects about eight percent of hospitalized patients. They have identified a new molecular pathway and a new class of molecules responsible for preventing potassium [...]