Treatment Outcomes for Cardiac Arrest Studied
< Sep. 24, 2008 > -- A
new analysis of cardiac arrest treated by emergency medical services in 10 areas
in North America finds a large difference in survival rates.
From city to city, there is a more than fivefold difference
in the odds that someone will survive sudden cardiac arrest, with the chances
resting on whatever emergency response system is in place, researchers found.
The study was published this week in the Journal
of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
"I expected there would be some differences, but the
differences were greater than we expected, greater than for heart attack and
stroke," says study author Dr. Graham Nichol, director of the Center for
Prehospital Emergency Care at the University of Washington, in Seattle.
Approximately 166,000 to 310,000 Americans per year
experience an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), although resuscitation is
not attempted in many of these cases.
"Accurate estimation of the burden of OHCA is essential to
evaluate progress toward improving public health by reducing cardiovascular
disease," the study authors write. "Knowledge of regional variation in outcomes
after cardiac arrest could guide identification of effective interventions that
are used in some communities but have not been implemented in others."
The study included data on all out-of-hospital cardiac
arrests in 10 North American sites (8 in the US and 2 in Canada) from May 2006
to April 2007. Each case of cardiac arrest was followed up to hospital
discharge, and included data available as of June 28, 2008. Cases were assessed
by organized emergency medical services (EMS) personnel.
The 10 study sites were participants in the Resuscitation
Outcomes Consortium, and were located in Alabama; Dallas; Iowa; Milwaukee;
Ottawa, Ontario; Pittsburgh; Portland, Oregon; Seattle; Toronto; and Vancouver,
British Columbia.
No attempt at resuscitation was made in almost half of all
cases.
Among the 58 percent who got emergency treatment, the
survival rate, community by community, ranged from 3 percent to 16.3 percent.
Of the more than 20,000 people who suffered cardiac arrest,
954 (4.6 percent) of them lived to be discharged from a hospital.
The incidence of reported cardiac arrest cases receiving
emergency treatment also varied widely, from 40.3 per 100,000 in the
lowest-reporting community to 86.7 per 100,000 in the highest reporting
community.
The great difference in survival rates are due "we think to
incidence and risk, as well as how the community responds to cardiac arrest,"
Dr. Nichol says.
There is no single continent-wide step that can be taken to
bring up survival rates, he says. "Every city needs to understand how well it is
doing," Dr. Nichol says. "Cardiac arrest is a treatable condition, and cities
should work hard to treat it better, rather than determining who should not be
treated."
The researchers and other experts agree that cardiac arrest
should be made a reportable disease, which it is not now, so that statistics on
incidence and survival would be readily available.
"That is the place to start," says Dr. Arthur B. Sanders, a
professor of medicine at the University of Arizona in Tucson. "I need to know
your numbers. If we had numbers on, say, witnessed ventricular fibrillation,
then we could use the basic principles we know about to implement changes that
potentially could improve survival."
The study is an important first step toward improving
emergency treatment of cardiac arrest, says Dr. Lance Becker, director of the
Center for Resuscitation Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania, and a
spokesman for the American Heart Association.
"If you don't measure something, you don't know what you
are doing and can't fix it," Dr. Becker says. "This is one of the largest
studies ever done, beginning to make communities better and safer places to live
in terms of surviving cardiac arrest. Communities with lower survival rates have
an opportunity to work on improving those rates and improving their chain of
survival."
Always consult your physician for more information.
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Coronary heart disease, or coronary artery disease
(CAD), is characterized by the accumulation of fatty deposits along the
innermost layer of the coronary arteries. The fatty deposits may develop in
childhood and continue to thicken and enlarge throughout the life span. This
thickening, called atherosclerosis, narrows the arteries and can decrease or
block the flow of blood to the heart.
Since coronary arteries deliver blood to the heart
muscle, any coronary artery disorder or disease can have serious
implications by reducing the flow of oxygen and nutrients to the heart,
which may lead to a heart attack and possibly death. Atherosclerosis (a
build-up of plaque in the inner lining of an artery causing it to narrow or
become blocked) is the most common cause of heart disease.
Nearly 13 million Americans suffer from coronary artery
disease - the number one killer of both men and women in the US.
Risk factors for CAD often include:
- high LDL cholesterol, high triglycerides levels and reduced HDL
cholesterol
- high blood pressure (hypertension)
- physical inactivity
- smoking
- obesity
- high saturated fat diet
- diabetes
Controlling risk factors is the key to preventing
illness and death from CAD.
The symptoms of coronary heart disease will depend on
the severity of the disease. Some persons with CAD have no symptoms, some
have episodes of mild chest pain or angina, and some have more severe chest
pain.
If too little oxygenated blood reaches the heart, a
person will experience chest pain called angina. When the blood supply is
completely cut off, the result is a heart attack, and the heart muscle
begins to die. Some persons may have a heart attack and never recognize the
symptoms. This is called a "silent" heart attack.
When symptoms are present, each person may experience
them differently. Symptoms of coronary artery disease may include:
- heaviness, tightness, pressure, and/or pain in the chest - behind
the breastbone
- pain radiating in the arms, shoulders, jaw, neck, and/or back
- shortness of breath
- weakness and fatigue
Always consult your physician for more information.
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