Title: NRP 2006
1NRP 2006
- Patti Murphy MD FRCPC
- Department of Anesthesiology University of Ottawa
- February 14th, 2007
2NRP
- Intended for practitioners responsible for
resuscitation of neonates - Primarily for neonates undergoing transition from
intra to extra-uterine life - Also applies to newborns within first few weeks
to months following birth
3Why do we need to know this?
4NRP 2006
- ILCOR process
- Overview / Review
- Initial steps
- Airway management
- Ventilation
- Oxygen
- Medications
- Ottawa Hospital Civic Campus
5ILCOR Consensus Process
6The ILCOR Consensus Process
- Step 1 State the Proposal
- a. Refine the research question(s)
- b. Gather the evidence
- Step 2 Assess the Quality of Each Study
- a. Determine the level of evidence (levels
1-8) - b. Critically assess each article for quality
of design methods - c. Determine the direction of the
results/statistics - d. Cross-tabulate by level, quality and
direction combine summarize
7The ILCOR Consensus ProcessStep 3 Determine the
Class of Recommendation
8ILCOR Neonatal Delegation
- Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada (HSFC)
- Australian Resuscitation Council (ARC)
- Council of Latin America for Resuscitation (CLAR)
- Dutch Resuscitation Council (DRC)
- European Resuscitation Council (ERC)
- New Zealand Resuscitation Council
- Resuscitation Council of South America (RCSA)
- World Health Organization (WHO)
- American Academy of Pediatrics / American Heart
Association NRP Steering Committee
9The Canadian Expert Committee
- Based on ILCOR consensus
- Each country is expected to develop their own
guidelines
10Overview
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12Initial Steps
13Is resuscitation needed?
NRP 2006
NRP 2000
14Oxygen Saturation After Birth
15Rabi, 2006
16Routine Care
NRP 2006
What if this well baby baby remains cyanotic gt
90 sec?
17Canadian Expert Committee
- Oxygen should be administered to babies who
remain cyanotic at 90 seconds of age
18The initial steps
2000
2006
19The initial steps
no oxygen given
Exception to dry the baby
2006
20Dry-exposed Resuscitation
Gestational Age gt 28w
21Wet-in-bag Resuscitation
Gestational Age lt 28w
22Wet-in-bag Resuscitation
- 88 infants
- Infants placed in the polyurethane bags were less
likely to have a temp lt36.40C on admission - 44 vs. 70 (plt0.001)
- Better if room at 25-26oC
Gestational Age 28w
Knobel et al. Heat loss prevention for preterm
infants in the delivery room. J Perinat
200525304-308
23Wet-in-bag Resuscitation
- Canadian Pediatric Society
- Maintenance of DR at 25 to 26oC will diminish
heat loss - If GA lt 28w, below the neck in a polyethylene bag
- All babies (term/preterm) under radiant warmer by
10 min should have servo-control probe
Gestational Age lt 28w
24Resuscitation when meconium present
25The Apgar Score
26Airway
27Canadian Expert Committee
- Every baby that is intubated (other than for the
suction of meconium) should have tracheal tube
placement confirmed by an exhaled CO2 detector - CO2 detectors should be used as the primary
method for confirming endotracheal tube placement
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29Exhaled CO2 detector
- Indicates placement if the trachea within 2 to 4
breaths. - May not turn color when cardiac output or
pulmonary circulation are minimal - Will not work if wet, or contaminated with drugs
such as epinephrine.
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32Caution
- No randomized, controlled trials on the use of
the LMA during neonatal resuscitation. - Cannot be considered a substitute for the
tracheal tube - Easier than intubation
- Further studies are necessary
33Ventilation
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35 Initial Ventilation - Term
- An initial ventilation pressure of 20 cm H2O may
be effective (ILCOR). - gt30-40 cm H2O may be necessary in some term
babies (ILCOR).
36Initial Ventilation - Preterm
- Avoid creation of excessive chest wall movement
(ILCOR 2005) - Use lowest pressures necessary to achieve a
response - An initial inflation pressure of 20-25 cm H2O is
adequate for most preterm infants (ILCOR 2005). - Consider surfactant if lt 30 weeks gestation
37Positive End-Expiratory Pressure
- If ongoing positive pressure ventilation is
required, PEEP of 3-6 cm of water should be used
(Canadian NRP 2006). - PEEP may be given with
- a flow-inflating bag
- T-piece resuscitator
- A self-inflating bag with a PEEP valve (Canadian
NRP 2006). - Self-inflating bags without a PEEP valve cannot
provide CPAP
38NRP The T-Piece Resuscitator
39NRP The T-Piece Resuscitator
40Oxygen
41Organ Site Of Free Oxygen Radical Damage
- Lungs
- Eyes
- Brain
- Gastrointestinal Tract
- Kidneys
- Other
42- What is the evidence to support
- room air over 100 oxygen
- for newborn resuscitation?
43Lambs Breathing 100 O2Bressack 1979
44- Five clinical studies including 1737 newborn
infants in need of resuscitation have been
published in which the resuscitation groups were
randomized to 21 or 100 O2 - Pure oxygen
- Significantly delayed the first breath
- Time to establish normal regular breathing
delayed - Duration of resuscitation was also significantly
prolonged - Saugstad Pediatrics 1998102(1)e1-7. Â
- Vento Biol Neonate 200179261-7. Â
- Vento M, J Pediatr 2003142242-8
- Ramji Indian Pediatr 200340510-7
- Ramji Pediatr Res 199334809-12
45Mortality with Oxygen or Air for Resuscitation-
Saugstad, 2005
46Problems with studies
- Limited number of studies/babies
- Majority in developing countries
- High mortality rates
- Variable/imprecise criteria for resuscitation
- Crossover between groups
- Failure to blind
- Design to show equivalence
47- Association between oxygen exposure at birth and
later childhood lymphatic leukemia. In their
study, a brief oxygen exposure of 3 to 10 minutes
was associated with a significant augmented odds
ratio of 3.5 for developing leukemia. - Naumburg EActa Paediatr 2002911328-33
48Is there Opposing Evidence?
- No human studies
- Newborn piglets resuscitated with air (Solas)
- - Increased CNS amino acids (eg.glutamate)
- - Lower mean BP CNS microcirculation
- Others show no difference in animal studies
49Canadian Recommendations
- PPV should be initiated with 21 O2
- Supplemental O2 should be used if the baby is
cyanotic or HRlt100 at 90 seconds of age - Blended gases should be available
- Pulse oximetry should be available for babies lt
33 weeks - It seems reasonable to avoid SPO2 . 95
50American NRP Guidelines 2006
- Use 100 oxygen when a baby is cyanotic or when
positive-pressure ventilation is required - Research suggests that resuscitation with less
than 100 may be just as successful. - For preterm babies, begin PPV with oxygen
concentration between room air and 100 oxygen.
No studies justify starting at any particular
concentration.
51Managing oxygen in the premature infant
- Options until blended gases are common practice
for neonatal care - self-inflating bags 21, 40, or gt80 oxygen
- mixing air (piped or cylinder) with 100 oxygen
using air and oxygen flow-meters and Y-connector - purchasing at least one blender to be used for
high-risk deliveries
52Medication
53NRP 2006 Algorithm
With skillful and timely implementation of
resuscitation steps, 99 of newborns will improve
without the need for medications
54Epinephrine
!
- If the heart rate remains below 60 bpm, despite
administration of ventilation and chest
compressions, your first action is to ensure that
ventilation and chest compressions are being
given optimally and that you are using 100
oxygen
55Science?
- Studies on Epinephrine in newborns are sorely
lacking - Current practices based on history and/or
extrapolation from adult and animal studies
56- Data in children shows no benefit to high dose
therapy - Peroni 2004 worse outcomes in paediatric
population with high dose epinephrine - No data specific to neonatal population
- Insufficient data to support routine use of
High-dose epinephrine - Class Indeterminate
57Endotracheal Epinephrine
- No randomized trials using endotracheal
epinephrine - One neonatal cohort study and one case series
showed benefit at 10X the dose - Most animal trials that showed any positive
effect used 5 10 times the currently recommended
IV dose - One neonatal model trial using the currently
recommended dose showed no benefit
58Endotracheal Epinephrine
- If endotracheal route is used, a dose up to 10X
the current IV dose should be used - Class indeterminate
- IV route should be used as soon as venous access
is established - Endotracheal epinephrine must not interfere with
the establishment of good quality ventilation
not effective in any dose without ventilation
59Epinephrine Administration
AAP
Canadian Addendum
Concentration 110,000 Preferred route is IV
but give first dose endotracheally while IV is
obtained. Dose IV 0.1 ml/kg Dose Endotracheal
1.0 ml/kg Administration Rate rapidly
60Medication Given No Improvement
61Signs of Hypovolemia
- Pallor persisting beyond oxygenation
- Weak pulses
- Low blood pressure
- Lack of response to resuscitation
- Hypovolemia is a common but often unrecognized
cause of need for resuscitation
62Hypovolemia
- Overt bleeding
- Placenta previa
- Vaso previa, cord avulsion
- Abruption
- Occult blood loss
- Feto-maternal hemorrhage
- Feto-fetal hemorrhage
- Feto-placental hemorrhage (e.g. nuchal cord)
63Volume Expansion
- Indicated when there is no response to
resuscitation and there is evidence of blood loss
or hypovolemia - Repeated doses may be necessary if there is
minimal response after the first dose - Umbilical vein remains preferred route but
intra-osseous acceptable (class IIb)
64Volume Expanders
- Isotonic crystalloid is the preferred solution
for volume expansion in neonatal resuscitation - Class IIa recommendation
- O-negative blood used for large volume blood loss
65Volume Expanders
- Dose and Rate
- 10 ml /kg slow IV push
- Rapid administration may result in intracranial
hemorrhage, particularly in preterm infants . - Infusion rate over 5 10 minutes (no clinical
trials have been conducted to define an optimal
rate)
66Naloxone
- No studies examining the recommended dose of
0.1mg/kg in any clinical situation in newborns. - Endotracheal route has been evaluated in adults
but no evidence for the use of this route in
newborns. - Not necessary during the acute phase of
resuscitation VENTILATE! -
67Naloxone
- Indications for use
- Continued respiratory depression after PPV has
restored a normal heart rate and colour - AND
- History of maternal narcotic administration in
the 4 hours prior to birth - Contraindicated in presence of maternal narcotic
dependence - Class Indeterminate recommendation
68Sodium Bicarbonate
- Discouraged during brief CPR
- May be useful during prolonged arrests AFTER
adequate ventilation is established and there is
no response to other therapies - Class II b recommendation
69Sodium Bicarbonate
- Known and potential side effects
- Rapid infusion may reduce myocardial function
- Bicarbonate increases extra cellular pH, but
intracellular pH may remain unchanged - Decreased cerebral blood flow described in
infants post bicarbonate infusion - Risk of IVH in preterm infants
70 IF NO IMPROVEMENT
71New Equipment- NRP 2006
- Blended oxygen
- Pulse oximeter
- Ventilation with PEEP
- Laryngeal mask airway
- CO2 detector
- Servo-control probe
- Plastic baggies
- Room temperature
72Ottawa Hospital Civic Campus
- Birthing Unit
- Self-inflating bags
- No piped air in the rooms, only O2
- Resuscitation room
- Flow inflating bags
- Birthing Rooms
- Air presently available
- CO2 detectors available
- LMAs available
- lt32 weeks gestation at General Campus
-
73O2 at TOH
- Infants gt 34 weeks begin with room air if
cyanotic or need PPV - If no appreciable improvement within 90 seconds,
with at least 30 seconds of effective
ventilation, provide 100 -
- For infants lt 34 weeks begin with 40 oxygen,
adjust O2 concentration up or down to achieve
saturation 88 90 - If heart rate does not respond by increasing to
gt100/min, use 100 oxygen -