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Two decades of advancement in public health and community strategies regarding cardiac arrest response has paid off with more ...
The Utility of Therapeutic Hypothermia for Post-Cardiac Arrest Syndrome Patients With an Initial Non-Shockable Rhythm. Circulation, November 2015 DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.016317 ...
Among those with shockable rhythms, survival increased from 13.4% to 33.5% for women and from 15.4% to 38.2% for men.
In one study of over 13,000 patients with cardiac arrest, survival was as high as 35% in patients with one of the "shockable" rhythms, and less than 2% in patients with a non-shockable rhythm.
DALLAS, Texas, Nov. 16, 2015 -- Lowering the body's temperature of cardiac arrest patients with "non-shockable" heart rhythms increases survival rates and brain function, according to new research ...
A significant advantage to long-term survival was observed in patients with a shockable initial rhythm versus those without (HR 0.30, 95% CI 0.23 to 0.39; P <.001).
Overdose-related arrests also had lower rates of shockable first monitored arrest rhythms vs. cardiac arrests attributable to other causes (5.1% vs. 20.9%; P < .001).
Administration of epinephrine within 4 minutes after first automatic external defibrillator shock for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest with initial shockable rhythm may improve survival and ...
In one study of over 13,000 patients with cardiac arrest, survival was as high as 35% in patients with one of the "shockable" rhythms, and less than 2% in patients with a non-shockable rhythm.
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