Assessing the influence of abdominal compression on time to return of circulation during resuscitation of asphyxiated newborn lambs: a randomised preclinical study.
Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed
; 109(4): 405-411, 2024 Jun 19.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38123977
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE:
During neonatal resuscitation, the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) can be achieved using epinephrine which optimises coronary perfusion by increasing diastolic pressure. Abdominal compression (AC) applied during resuscitation could potentially increase diastolic pressure and therefore help achieve ROSC. We assessed the use of AC during resuscitation of asystolic newborn lambs, with and without epinephrine.METHODS:
Near-term fetal lambs were instrumented for physiological monitoring and after delivery, asphyxiated until asystole. Resuscitation was commenced with ventilation followed by chest compressions. Lambs were randomly allocated to intravenous epinephrine (20 µg/kg, n=9), intravenous epinephrine+continuous AC (n=8), intravenous saline placebo (5 mL/kg, n=6) and intravenous saline+AC (n=9). After three allocated treatment doses, rescue intravenous epinephrine was administered if ROSC had not occurred. Time to achieve ROSC was the primary outcome. Lambs achieving ROSC were ventilated and monitored for 60 min before euthanasia. Brain histology was assessed for micro-haemorrhage.RESULTS:
Use of AC did not influence mean time to achieve ROSC (epinephrine lambs 177 s vs epinephrine+AC lambs 179 s, saline lambs 602 s vs saline+AC lambs 585 s) or rate of ROSC (nine of nine lambs, eight of eight lambs, one of six lambs and two of eight lambs, respectively). Application of AC was associated with higher diastolic blood pressure (mean value >10 mm Hg), mean and systolic blood pressure and carotid blood flow during resuscitation. Cortex and deep grey matter micro-haemorrhage was more frequent in AC lambs.CONCLUSION:
Use of AC during resuscitation increased diastolic blood pressure, but did not impact time to ROSC.Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Epinephrine
/
Animals, Newborn
Limits:
Animals
Language:
En
Journal:
Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed
Journal subject:
PEDIATRIA
/
PERINATOLOGIA
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Australia