not true the heart can tolerate many hours of ischemia, the brain only 5 minutes.+ 1. well cpr also needs to feed the heart itself. Although it is indeed less sensitive.
the sole sole sole purpose of cpr is for the brain.
not true the heart can tolerate many hours of ischemia, the brain only 5 minutes.+ 1. well cpr also needs to feed the heart itself. Although it is indeed less sensitive.
my apologies, yes thank you, a typo on my part, the "most" sensitive organ of course to oxygen deprivationBababuey, earlier you stated that "the brain is the least sensitive to oxygen deprivation.", did you mean least tolerant to oxygen deprivation?
cpr itself has essentially ZERO influence on coronary artery blood flow.
I absolutely support CPR. Your first sentence is wrong -- an AED can deliver a shock that will restore normal heart function for several common types of heart failure (the AED will detect those conditions and deliver a shock only if warranted). The goal of CPR is to keep blood flowing so that the organs, especially the heart and brain, are still alive when the defibrillator arrives on the scene. You are correct that CPR doubles or triples the survival rate--because it keeps major organs alive while you wait for the defibrillator. Every minute that goes by without blood flow cuts your chance of survival significantly, and CPR staves that off so it is very worthwhile--but if an EMT crew doesn't show up, or someone doesn't come running in with an AED, CPR is really just pushing blood around in a dead body. That heart needs to be restarted.An AED won't restart a heart either. But CPR might keep the blood flowing long enough for the proper drugs to be delivered. So I disagree with your statement. CPR is likely to help. Studies show the survival rate is doubled to tripled when CPR is applied immediately. Are you jumping on the "discourage CPR" bandwagon too by saying it won't help?
As others have pointed out, defibs don't restart hearts, they shock an irregular rythm into a normal one. When a heart has completely stopped, the current practice is adrenaline and CPR or cardiac massage. It used to be atropine and defib (atropine increases the effect electrical currents have on the muscles) but that's largely been found ineffective and discontinued. It's currently up for debate in the medical community whether adrenaline even has any effect.Yes, that's rather interesting to hear that AED's won't restart a heart. What exactly is the point of an AED then?
I mean, unless dtjohnst is pointing out the distinction between recovering from ventricular fibrillation and asystole, ...sure, the window is very small (I think it's not much more than a minute or two) but even in asystole I believe an AED or any defibrillator is your best bet.
dtjohnst - can you elaborate?
cpr is not about the heart. that is final. cpr is soley about the brain and its protection. an aed only works with specific pulseless rhythms. but its better to err on the side of caution in this case.I absolutely support CPR. Your first sentence is wrong -- an AED can deliver a shock that will restore normal heart function for several common types of heart failure (the AED will detect those conditions and deliver a shock only if warranted). The goal of CPR is to keep blood flowing so that the organs, especially the heart and brain, are still alive when the defibrillator arrives on the scene. You are correct that CPR doubles or triples the survival rate--because it keeps major organs alive while you wait for the defibrillator. Every minute that goes by without blood flow cuts your chance of survival significantly, and CPR staves that off so it is very worthwhile--but if an EMT crew doesn't show up, or someone doesn't come running in with an AED, CPR is really just pushing blood around in a dead body. That heart needs to be restarted.
It's about the heart as well, not in the sense of restarting it, but in keeping blood flow to the major heart muscles so that they don't die. If they die, you aren't restarting that heart when the AED gets there. But certainly yes brain is key too.cpr is not about the heart. that is final. cpr is soley about the brain and its protection. an aed only works with specific pulseless rhythms. but its better to err on the side of caution in this case.
Thanks, I read my original post several times. Not just the tiny bit you posted. Apparently I never said "check pulse" based on my words. I guess you just decided I was implying it?Ahem.
What other method do you know of to "be very certain the heart has stopped"?Thanks, I read my original post several times. Not just the tiny bit you posted. Apparently I never said "check pulse" based on my words. I guess you just decided I was implying it?
I dis say (to paraphrase the repeated comments) Do not apply CPR to someone that is breathing or conscious. I guess I was implying that being conscious or breathing was a sign that your heart was beating.
Sorry if it was not clear to you.![]()
What other method do you know of to "be very certain the heart has stopped"?
Get over yourself. You got it wrong. Just fess up.
I didn't say it couldn't shock a bad rythm. But in those cases the heart is not stopped, it's considered active, so you aren't restarting it.I absolutely support CPR. Your first sentence is wrong -- an AED can deliver a shock that will restore normal heart function for several common types of heart failure (the AED will detect those conditions and deliver a shock only if warranted). The goal of CPR is to keep blood flowing so that the organs, especially the heart and brain, are still alive when the defibrillator arrives on the scene. You are correct that CPR doubles or triples the survival rate--because it keeps major organs alive while you wait for the defibrillator. Every minute that goes by without blood flow cuts your chance of survival significantly, and CPR staves that off so it is very worthwhile--but if an EMT crew doesn't show up, or someone doesn't come running in with an AED, CPR is really just pushing blood around in a dead body. That heart needs to be restarted.
+1 You need a medical faculty to start it. Or be blessed by the new pope.It's about the heart as well, not in the sense of restarting it, but in keeping blood flow to the major heart muscles so that they don't die. If they die, you aren't restarting that heart when the AED gets there. But certainly yes brain is key too.
What a second, you just told me AED's do restart the heart. Make up your mind.It's about the heart as well, not in the sense of restarting it, but in keeping blood flow to the major heart muscles so that they don't die. If they die, you aren't restarting that heart when the AED gets there. But certainly yes brain is key too.