Emergency Medicine

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
Paediatric Emergencies 341

CARDIOPULMONARY RESUSCITATION

Call
Resuscitation
Team
(1 min CPR
first, if alone)

During CPR:
●Ensure high-quality CPR: rate, depth, recoil
●Plan actions before interrupting CPR
●Give oxygen
●Vascular access (intravenous, intraosseous)
●Give adrenaline (epinephrine) every 3–5 min
●Consider advanced airway and
capnography
●Continuous chest compressions when
advanced airway in place
●Correct reversible causes

Reversible causes
●Hypoxia
●Hypovolaemia
●Hypo-/hyperkalaemia/metabolic
●Hypothermia
●Tension pneumothorax
●Toxins
●Tamponade – cardiac
●Thromboembolism

Unresponsive?
Not breathing or only
occasional gasps

CPR (5 initial breaths then 15:2)
Attach defibrillator/monitor
Minimize interruptions

Assess
rhythm

Non-shockable
(PEA/asystole)

Shockable
(VF/pulseless VT)

1 shock 4 J/kg

Immediately resume:
CPR for 2 min
Minimize interruptions

Immediately resume:
CPR for 2 min
Minimize interruptions

Immediate post-cardiac
arrest treatment
●Use ABCDE approach
●Controlled oxygenation
and ventilation
●Investigations
●Treat precipitating cause
●Temperature control
●Therapeutic hypothermia?

Return of spontaneous
circulation

Figure 11.2 Paediatric advanced life support algorithm. ABCDE, airway/breathing/
circulation/disability/exposure; CPR, cardiopulmonary resuscitation; ECG,
electrocardiogram; PEA, pulseless electrical activity; VF, ventricular fibrillation;
VT, ventricular tachycardia. Reproduced with kind permission from European
Resuscitation Council (2010) European Resuscitation Council Guidelines for
Resuscitation 2010. Section 1. Executive summary. Resuscitation 81 : 1219–76.

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