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Two recent interventions have proven in randomized trials to improve neurologic survival in cardiacarrest: 1) the combination of the ResQPod and the ResQPump (suction device for compression-decompression CPR -- Lancet 2011 ) and 2) Dual Sequential defibrillation.
The ECG shows obvious STEMI(+) OMI due to probable proximal LAD occlusion. The patient in today’s case is a previously healthy 40-something male who contacted EMS due to acute onset crushing chest pain. The pain was 10/10 in intensity radiating bilaterally to the shoulders and also to the left arm and neck. The below ECG was recorded.
A prehospital ECG was recorded (not shown and not seen by me) which was worrisome for STEMI. A previous ECG from 4 years prior was normal: This looks like an anterior STEMI, but it is complicated by tachycardia (which can greatly elevate ST segments) and by the presentation which is of fever and sepsis.
A 12-lead was recorded, showing "STEMI," but is unavailable. The patient was unconscious BEFORE the cardiacarrest, at the same time that she had strong pulses. Therefore, cardiacarrest is NOT the etiology of the coma. She was BVM ventilated and suctioned. Shortly thereafter, pulses were lost.
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