Cardiopulmonary Arrest for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Included In This Lesson
Study Tools For Cardiopulmonary Arrest for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Outline
Cardiopulmonary Arrest:
Definition/Etiology:
-Cessation of adequate heart function and respirations
-Without reversal will result in death
-Heart is not beating, lungs aren’t breathing
Causes:
- Cardiac
- MI, other
- Respiratory
- Obstruction, airway disease (asthma, COPD)
- PE
- Muscle weakness
- Trauma
- Hemorrhage and shock (poor prognosis)
- Structural damage
- Spinal cord injury
>60% of cardiac arrests caused by acute myocardial infarction (AMI)
Pathophysiology:
- Pump failure
- Unexpected interruption of mechanical activity
- Inefficient blood flow, no palpable pulses
Clinical Presentation:
- Preceding cardiopulmonary arrest – palpitations, shortness of breath, nausea, and chest pain
- cardiopulmonary arrest diagnosis – loss of Central pulse (including carotid/femoral on adults, brachial on infants) and spontaneous respirations
Collaborative Management:
BLS:
- Recognize
- Activate emergency response
- High quality chest compressions (Fast, hard, allow for chest recoil)
- Rescue breathing
- Rapid defibrillation
- When either a basic AED or more complex one in “basic mode,” the equipment knows when to shock. For ACLS, certified providers (could be nurses) can adjust/customize
ABCs:
- Airway – airway patency, do not delay compressions or defibrillation for advanced airway insertion
- Breathing – bag-mask ventilation (assess rise and fall of chest)
- Ratio chest compressions: ventilations = 30:1
- Advanced airway – q5-6 seconds
- No hyperventilation (increases intrathoracic pressure, decreases venous return to heart
- Circulation – defibrillation and medication
Defibrillation:
- Early defibrillation; immediately resume CPR
Medications:
- Epinephrine – 1mg IV/IO q3-5 minutes
- Amiodarone – 300mg (first dose); after 5 minutes – 150mg (second dose)
Correct causes of pump failure – think Hs and Ts:
Pregnancy Considerations
- Follow standard AHA Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS) guidelines
- Provide chest compressions slightly higher anatomically
- Manually displace the uterus to the left to prevent or correct vena cava syndrome
- Initiate IV access above the level of diaphragm
- Remove fetal monitoring devices prior to defibrillation
- Identify and treat the contributing factors
- Consider emergency Cesarean section if no maternal return of spontaneous circulation within 4 minutes of arrest
Ultimate goal = return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC)
Evaluation | Patient Monitoring | Education:
After ROSC
- Temperature management/therapeutic hypothermia
- Improves neurologic recovery
- Target temperatures of 32–34°C for 12–24 hours
- Continuous core temperature observation (indwelling urinary catheter
- Control shivering (prevent increased body temperature)
- Sedation, analgesia, and neuromuscular blockade
- Monitor electrolytes and glucose and correct as needed
Linchpins: (Key Points)
The pump isn’t pumping – think mechanical failure
- Heart muscle is not pumping effectively
- Circulation impaired
- Need CPR (take over pumping action until cause of failure corrected)
- ROSC = targeted temperature management
Transcript
For more great CEN prep, got to the link below to purchase the “Emergency Nursing Examination Review” book by Dr. Laura Gasparis Vonfrolio RN, PHD
https://greatnurses.com/
References:
- Emergency Nurses Association. (2017) Emergency Nursing Core Curriculum, 7th Edition. PA: Saunders
- Nelson, N. (2017). Cardiovascular Emergencies. In CEN Online Review. Emergency Nurses Association.