Title: Pediatric Cardiac Arrest: Old Evidence and New Guidelines
1Pediatric Cardiac Arrest Old Evidence and New
Guidelines
- Tim Lynch, MD
- April, 2001
2Resuscitation
- Reanimation (Fr)
- Resuscitare (L) the restoration of life of one
apparently dead
3Case Study
- A 5-year old girl is brought to your emergency
department by paramedics after being found at
home to be apneic, and pulseless. She has
received only BVM ventilation and chest
compressions en route.
4Case Study Questions/Objectives
- Why do children arrest?
- What are the likely outcomes of these children?
- Whats your dose of epinephrine and why?
- What are these new agents and when do we use
them?
5Why do children arrest?
6Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- Review of patients suffering cardiorespiratory
arrest at Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia
between 1976 and 1980 (ED, Medical, and Surgical
Units)
7Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- 130 arrests - 96 hospital and 34 EDs
- mean age of 2 and 65 less than 12 months
8Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- ED (34 with 42 diagnoses)
- Respiratory (14)
- CNS (9)
- CVS (8)
- SIDS (6)
- DOA (4)
- rigor mortis, low temperature, asystole
9Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- Respiratory (14)
- 4 pneumonia
- 3 aspiration
- 2 asthma
- 2 respiratory failure
- 1 epiglottitis
- 1 restrictive
- 1 RDS
10Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- CNS (9)
- 6 trauma
- 2 seizure
- 1 hydrocephalus
11Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- Cardiovascular (8)
- 4 CHD
- 2 sickle cell
- 1 CHF
- 1 hemophilia
12Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- Hospitalized Patients (96 with 133 diagnoses)
- Respiratory (57)
- Cardiovascular (28)
- CNS (25)
- GI (7)
- Miscellaneous (16)
13Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- Respiratory (57)
- 26 RDS/BPD - 1 epiglottitis
- 12 pneumonia - 1 choanal atresia
- 4 apnea - 1 pulm hemosidero
- 3 bronchiolitis - 1 botulism
- 3 aspiration
- 3 trach obstruction
- 2 respiratory failure
14Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- CNS (25)
- 10 hydrocephalus
- 5 tumour
- 4 meningitis
- 2 seizure
- 2 anoxic encephalopathy
- 1 hemorrhage
- 1 microcephaly
15Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- GI (7)
- 3 NEC
- 1 appendicitis
- 1 Hirschsprungs
- 1 TE Fistula
- 1 SBO
16Pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A
review of 130 cases.Ludwig S et al Clin Pediatr
19842371-75
- Miscellaneous (16)
- 6 congenital (non-cardiac)
- 5 tumours (non-CNS)
- 2 genetic
- 1 drug ingestion
- 1 ITP
- 1 metabolic
17What are the likely outcomes of these children?
18Outcome of children who are apneic and pulseless
in the emergency roomORourke P, Crit Care Med
198614466-468
- To examine mortality and morbidity of patients
successfully resuscitated after arriving
pulseless and apneic - 3-year retrospective chart review of patients
admitted from the ED to ICU over 3 years in
Childrens Hospital, Boston
19Outcome of children who are apneic and pulseless
in the emergency roomORourke P, Crit Care Med
198614466-468
- 34 patients admitted to ICU post-resuscitation
- 27 died in the ICU
- 7 were discharged from the hospital
20Patient Profiles
21Etiology
22The Resuscitation
23Outcome of children who are apneic and pulseless
in the emergency roomORourke P, Crit Care Med
198614466-468
- 27 died in the ICU
- 7 due to cardiovascular instability
- 20 removed from life support diagnosed with brain
death - 7 discharged from the ICU to chronic care
- 4 were victims of near drowning
- 2 vegetative 1died secondary to obstructed trach
- 1 functioning at 9 mo level at age 4
- 2 with upper airway obstruction - both vegetative
- 1 with blunt chest trauma - vegetative
24Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
- Retrospective review of arrests at HSC over 1
year - outcomes at 6 months
- predictive accuracy of variables considered to
influence survival
25Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
- Respiratory Arrest - cessation of breathing for
longer than 1 minute without apparent loss of
cardiac output - Cardiac Arrest - apneic with no cardiac output
(no recordable BP or femoral pulse)
26Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
- 42 attempted resuscitations (9 - respiratory 33
- cardiac) - 21 females and males mean age 5.5 y
- overall survival of 17 (9 cardiac arrests)
- 7 alive at 6 months - 1 with severe neurologic
deficit
27Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
28Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
29Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
- All 33 with pre-existing cardiac disease had a
cardiac arrest - 30/33 with asystole
- 3/33 with intractable ventricular fibrillation
30Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
31Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
32Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
- Respiratory (4)
- 2 with hydrocephalus and blocked shunts
- 1 with lymphoma and 1 with cystic hygroma
- Cardiac (3)
- CCHD and arrythmia
- esophageal atresia and recurrent aspiration
- 3 yo girl with CCHD and pneumonia - arrested for
12 min and received epi once - spastic quadriplegia
33Results of inpatient pediatric resuscitationGilli
s, J et al. Crit Car Med 198614469-471
- Respiratory arrests had better outcome
- predictors of non-survival
- gt 15 minutes of CPR
- administration of more than 1 dose of epi
34Whats your dose of epinephrine and why?
35High-dose epinephrine improves outcome from
pediatric cardiac arrestGoetting MG et al, Ann
Emerg Med 19912022-26
- Compared a prospectively treated high-dose
epinephrine (HDE) study group with historical
cohorts receiving conventional dose (SDE) with
respect to the return of spontaneous circulation
(ROSC)
36High-dose epinephrine improves outcome from
pediatric cardiac arrestGoetting MG et al, Ann
Emerg Med 19912022-26
- 20 consecutive patients treated for cardiac arres
who failed ROSC after 2 doses of SDE (0.01 mg/kg)
five min apart were given HDE (o.2 mg/kg) in 110
000 for infants and 11000 for older patients
37High-dose epinephrine improves outcome from
pediatric cardiac arrestGoetting MG et al, Ann
Emerg Med 19912022-26
- Iv line was flushed after each dose
- atropine 0.01 mg/kg was given for bradycardia and
asystole with each SDE - sodium bicarbonate 1 mEq/kg was administered
between each SDE - all patients ventilated with 100 O2
38High-dose epinephrine improves outcome from
pediatric cardiac arrestGoetting MG et al, Ann
Emerg Med 19912022-26
- ROSC was defined as
- a supraventricular rhythm with palpable pulses
or - an invasive systolic pressure greater than 60 mm
Hg
39High-dose epinephrine improves outcome from
pediatric cardiac arrestGoetting MG et al, Ann
Emerg Med 19912022-26
- historic controls -
- 20 consecutive children treated by the same
author over 12 months - with witnessed arrests,
- receiving ACLS within 5 min, and
- receiving more than 2 SDEs
40High-dose epinephrine improves outcome from
pediatric cardiac arrestGoetting MG et al, Ann
Emerg Med 19912022-26
- 14 of HDE had ROSC within 5 minutes versus none
of the controls (plt0.001) - all 14 responded with sinus tachycardia for at
least 15 min - mild to moderate hypertension for 20 min in 8
- 10 placed on vasopressor drips
41High-dose epinephrine improves outcome from
pediatric cardiac arrestGoetting MG et al, Ann
Emerg Med 19912022-26
- 14 survivors
- 8 survived to discharge
- 6 regained pre-arrest neurologic level
- 3 developmentally normal 6 - 17 mo later
(pulmonary contusions, hypovolemia, septic shock) - 3 regained severe pre-existing cognitive level
- 2 with global cortical damage
42What are these new agents and when do we use them?
43New Guidelines
- amiodarone
- procainamide
- lidocaine
44Amiodarone
- Inhibits outward K current - prolongs QT
- Inhibits Na channels - slows and conduction
(prolongs QRS) - Non-competitive inhibitor of alpha- and
beta-adrenergic receptors - secondary to sympathetic block - vasodilatation
and AV nodal suppression Non-competitive
45Amiodarone
- Most commonly used for ectopic atrial tachycardia
or junctional ectopic tachycardia post cardiac
surgery - 5 mg/kg loading infusion over minutes to 15
mg/kg/day - hypotension is the main adverse effect
46Procainamide
- Sodium channel blocking agent - prolongs
refractory period and depresses conduction
velocity - prolonged QT and PR intervals - effective for atrial fibrillation and flutter,
SVT, JET, and perfusing VT
47Procainamide
- Must be given by slow infusion to avoid heart
block, myocardial depression, and prolonged QT - 15 mg/kg over 30 to 60 min
- stop infusion if hypotension or QRS widens to gt
50 of baseline
48Lidocaine
- Not effective for ventricular arrhythmias in
infants or children unless associated with focal
myocardial ischemia - may be considered in shock-resistant VF or
pulseless VT - 1 mg/kg bolus then 20 to 50 ug/kg/min
49Pediatric Epinephrine Dosing
50Epinephrine
- Alpha and beta-adrenergic properties
- Alpha-adrenergic vasoconstriction
- Increases aortic diastolic pressure and coronary
perfusion
51High Dose Epinephrine
- 10 to 20 times the standard dose
- A dangerous dose in one patient may be lifesaving
in another - Improved survival and neurological outcome
- Increased myocardial consumption and post arrest
hyperadrenergic state
52New Guidelines Epinephrine
- The conventional dose of epinephrine is
recommended for second and subsequent doses - Higher doses may be considered
53New Guidelines Bradycardia
- Atropine is recommended in the treatment of
symptomatic bradycardia caused by AV block or
increased vagal tone
54New Guidelines SVT
- Vagal maneuvers introduced
- Verapamil remains contraindicated in infants
- Amiodarone
- Procainamide
55New Guidelines Stable VT
- Amiodarone
- Procainamide or lidocaine considered alternative
agents
56New Guidelines Pulseless VT/VF
- Defibrillation 2 J/kg, 4 J/kg, 4 J/kg
- Epinephrine
- Amiodarone
57Amiodarone
58Procainamide