CPR

24,112 views 29 slides Jul 15, 2013
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About This Presentation

ECG
Deepa Merin Kuriakose
Asst.Professor
Govt.College of Nursing, Kottayam
Kerala, India
[email protected]


Slide Content

BASIC LIFE SUPPORT
(BLS)

OBJECTIVES
Participants should be able to demonstrate:
How to assess the collapsed victim
How to perform chest compressions and
rescue breathing
How to place an unconscious breathing
victim in the recovery position.

The American Heart Association (AHA)
estimates that about 3,50,000 people die of
cardiac arrest each year.
Approximately 4280 out of every one lakh
people die every year from Sudden Cardiac
Arrest (SCA) in India alone.
About 74-80% of all sudden cardiac arrests
happen at home; so being trained in CPR can
mean the difference between life & death for a
member of your family.
BACKGROUND

Approximately 10% of SCA events occur among
people less than 40 years of age.
Effective bystander CPR, provided immediately
after sudden cardiac arrest, can double victims
chance of survival.
The survival rates for performing basic life
support alone are reported between 0% & 6%.
CPR cannot ‘restart’ the heart, but it can keep
blood and oxygen moving through the victim’s
body until medical help arrives.
BACKGROUND CONTINUED…

CHAIN OF SURVIVAL

SEQUENCES OF PROCEDURES PERFORMED TO
RESTORE THE CIRCULATION OF OXYGENATED
BLOOD AFTER A SUDDEN PULMONARY AND/OR
CARDIAC ARREST.
CHEST COMPRESSIONS AND PULMONARY
VENTILATION PERFORMED BY ANYONE WHO
KNOWS HOW TO DO
IT, ANYWHERE, IMMEDIATELY, WITHOUT ANY
OTHER EQUIPMENT OTHER THAN A PROTECTIVE
DEVICE.
BASIC LIFE SUPPORT

Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths

Scene
Rescuer
Victim
Bystanders
Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths
APPROACH SAFELY

Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths
CHECK RESPONSE

Shake shoulders gently
Ask “Are you all right?”
If he responds
Leave as you find him.
Find out what is wrong.
Reassess regularly.
CHECK RESPONSE

Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths
SHOUT FOR HELP

Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths
OPEN AIRWAY

Head tilt, chin lift + jaw thrust
-healthcare professionals

Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths
CHECK BREATHING

Look, listen and feel for
NORMAL breathing
Do not confuse agonal
breathing with
NORMAL breathing
CHECK BREATHING

Occurs shortly after the heart stops in up to
40% of cardiac arrests
Described as barely, heavy, noisy or gasping
breathing
Recognise as a sign of cardiac arrest
Erroneous information can result in
withholding CPR from cardiac arrest victim
AGONAL BREATHING

Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths
30 CHEST COMPRESSIONS

•Place the heel of one hand
in the centre of the chest
•Place other hand on top
•Interlock fingers
•Compress the chest
–Rate 100 min
-1
–Depth 4-5 cm
–Equal compression :
relaxation
•When possible change CPR
operator every 2 min
CHEST COMPRESSIONS

Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths
RESCUE BREATHS

RESCUE BREATHS
Pinch the nose
Take a normal breath
Place lips over mouth
Blow until the chest
rises
Take about 1 second
Allow chest to fall
Repeat

RECOMMENDATIONS:
-Tidal volume
500 –600 ml
-Respiratory rate
give each breaths over about 1s
with enough volume to make the
victim’s chest rise
-Chest-compression-only
continuously at a rate of 100 min
RESCUE BREATHS

CONTINUE C P R
30 2

Approach safely
Check response
Shout for help
Open airway
Check breathing
30 chest compressions
2 rescue breaths

IF VICTIM STARTS TO BREATHE
NORMALLY PLACE IN RECOVERY
POSITION

Qualified help arrives and takes over
The victim starts breathing normally
Rescuer becomes exhausted
CONTINUE RESUSCITATION UNTIL

SPONTANEOUS signs of circulation are restored.
TURNED over to medical services or properly
trained and authorized personnel.
OPERATOR is already exhausted & cannot
continue CPR.
PHYSICIAN assumes responsibility (declares
death, take over etc)
WHEN TO STOP CPR

To save one life is as if to save the world-
-The Talmud

Thank You……………
-Deepa Merin Kuriakose
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