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Had a traumatic arrest about 2 hours ago. Blunt trauma from an MVA. CPR started, pt was tubed and IO'd and had one round of epi. When he was still asystole we stopped.
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all trauma arrests are arguably a crapshoot.
That is somewhat of a misleading number.
When you break it down into penetrating arrest, the local variance is between 6-8% usually.
The blunt arrest is <1%
to call it an overall 3% I think is an oversimplification of a more complex statistic that does not reflect reality.
All arrests are a crap shoot its like Vegas there are only enough winners to give the illusion it's worth playing the game.
I still think its ridiculous that we'll work an 80 year old in cardiac arrest from an MI but not an 18 year old in cardiac arrest from a GSW. Yes there's maybe a 5 percent greater chance of saving the 80 year old but we all know it's probably not going to end well. I still think its primarily a money issue.
I don't think it's ridiculous at all. CPR and ACLS are designed to work on patients that have a presumed cardiac (medical) etiology for their arrest, not for trauma. Unless you can get the patient to someone that can open their chest within 5 minutes of arrest (and that's a stretch) all you're doing is wasting time, money, and effort, and beating on a corpse. Pumping on the chest and pushing epi isn't going to do squat for a hole in the guy's ventricle. IMHO, either work them all the way or don't do it at all. Doing a few rounds of ACLS on a trauma patient and then calling them is just crappy medicine, again, IMHO.
I still think its ridiculous that we'll work an 80 year old in cardiac arrest from an MI but not an 18 year old in cardiac arrest from a GSW. Yes there's maybe a 5 percent greater chance of saving the 80 year old but we all know it's probably not going to end well. I still think its primarily a money issue.