Cardiopulmonary Arrest for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
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Study Tools For Cardiopulmonary Arrest for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
CPR Overview (Cheatsheet)
CPR Compressions (Image)
Cardiac Anatomy (Image)
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.
Related Lessons
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Atrial Fibrillation (AFib)
Day in the Life of an ICU (Intensive Care Unit) Nurse
Transfer and Stabilization for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
3rd Degree AV Heart Block (Complete Heart Block)
Lacerations for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Penetrating Thoracic Trauma