Chest compression fraction and factors influencing it
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Emergencies, Trauma and Shock
Abstract
Introduction: Chest compression fraction (CCF) is the cumulative time spent providing chest compressions divided by the total time taken for the entire resuscitation. Targeting a CCF of at least 60% is intended to limit interruptions in compressions and maximize coronary perfusion during resuscitation. We aimed to identify the mean CCF and its relationship with various factors affecting it. Methods: Patients presenting to the emergency department in cardiac arrest at a single center were prospectively included in this study. Resuscitation was provided by trained health-care providers. The feedback device Cprmeter2™ was placed on the patient's sternum at the beginning of resuscitation. The total time taken for the entire resuscitation was noted by the device and CCF calculated. Results: The mean CCF was analyzed using descriptive statistics and was found to be 71.60% ± 7.52%. The total duration of resuscitation (R =-0.55, P = < 0.001, min-max, 2.02-34.31, mean 12.25 ± 6.54), number of people giving chest compressions (R =-0.48, P = < 0.001, min-max, 1-6, mean 4.04 ± 1.12), and total number of team members in resuscitation (R =-0.50, P = < 0.001, min-max, 4-10, mean 6.65 ± 1.32) had negative correlation with CCF. Diurnal variation (day, n = 35; mean 69.20% ± 7% and night, n = 20; mean 75.80% ± 5.6%, P = 0.001) and patients receiving defibrillation (receiving n = 10 mean 67.00% ± 4.11% and not receiving n = 45 mean 72.62 ± 7.42%, P = 0.005) were found to significantly affect CCF. Conclusion: The mean CCF for cardiac arrest patients was well within the targets of guideline recommendation. CCF decreased when resuscitation lasted longer, during daytime when the defibrillator was used, the total team members increased, and also when the number of people giving chest compressions increased. CCF during resuscitation may improve if there is a focus on improving these factors and requires validation in multicentric settings.
First Page
41
Last Page
46
DOI
10.4103/JETS.JETS_36_21
Publication Date
1-1-2022
Recommended Citation
Mathew, Deo; Krishnan, S. Vimal; Abraham, Siju; and Varghese, Salish, "Chest compression fraction and factors influencing it" (2022). Open Access archive. 5051.
https://impressions.manipal.edu/open-access-archive/5051