Improvements to the "chain of survival" increased survival and decreased residual neurological damage in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients in Japan, researchers report in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.
Researchers considered 8,782 bystander-witnessed cardiac arrests from May 1998 to December 2006 in Osaka, Japan. During this time period, Japanese citizens received training in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), dispatcher instruction in CPR was introduced and procedures were changed to allow emergency service personnel to deliver shocks with a defibrillator without online physician oversight and to intubate patients in the field. Intubation is the placement of a flexible plastic tube into the trachea to protect the patient's airway and provide a means of mechanical ventilation.
As a result, the researchers said:
"This study proves that improvement in the 'chain of survival' results in increased survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in the real world," said Taku Iwami, M.D., lead author of the study and an assistant professor at Kyoto University Health Service. "The improvement is mainly due to the improvement in the first three links of the chain, but there was some incremental benefit in the fourth link of advanced life support."
The links in the chain of survival are:
1) Early recognition of the emergency and activation of the emergency medical services "phone 9-1-1".2) Early bystander CPR.3) Early delivery of a shock with a defibrillator4) Early advanced life support followed by post resuscitation care delivered by healthcare providers.
For each minute of delay in starting CPR, the chance of neurologically intact survival decreased 11 percent, researchers said. For each minute of delay in shock for ventricular fibrillation, researchers found a 16 percent decrease in survival. For every minute of delay to intubation, survival decreased 4 percent.
In Osaka (population, 8.8 million), about 120,000 citizens per year participated in conventional CPR training. There were no programs to train in compression-only CPR during this study period.
Only 24 patients received shocks administered by bystanders during this period, but the researchers expect this to increase with further spread of AEDs and training of the general public.
"We need to increase the number of automated external defibrillators in public places as well as train people in not only CPR but in use of AEDs," Iwami said. "In many areas of the world, there are serious delays in the use of CPR and AEDs. We hope this study encourages other EMS systems to start or continue their efforts to improve based on objective data."
In the United States, nearly 300,000 cardiac arrest victims are treated outside the hospital by EMS per year, according to the American Heart Association. About 8 percent of cardiac arrest victims survive to hospital discharge.
Source: American Heart Association