Effects and limitations of an AED with audiovisual feedback for cardiopulmonary resuscitation: a randomized manikin study.

Resuscitation

Division of Cardio-Thoracic-Vascular Surgical Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine¸ Department of Anaesthesia, General Intensive Care and Pain Medicine, Medical University, Waehringer Gürtel 18-20, 1090 Vienna, Austria.

Published: July 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the impact of an automated external defibrillator (AED) with audiovisual feedback on CPR quality during basic life support performed by trained laypersons.
  • The feedback group demonstrated better compliance with compression rates and effective compressions but maintained a shallower compression depth compared to the control group.
  • While the audiovisual feedback improved certain CPR parameters, the reduced compression depth may adversely affect cardiac output, posing a concern for effective resuscitation.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Correctly performed basic life support (BLS) and early defibrillation are the most effective measures to treat sudden cardiac arrest. Audiovisual feedback improves BLS. Automated external defibrillators (AED) with feedback technology may play an important role in improving CPR quality. The aim of this simulation study was to investigate if an AED with audiovisual feedback improves CPR parameters during standard BLS performed by trained laypersons.

Methods: With ethics committee approval and informed consent, 68 teams (2 flight attendants each) performed 12 min of standard CPR with the AED's audiovisual feedback mechanism enabled or disabled. We recorded CPR quality parameters during resuscitation on a manikin in this open, prospective, randomized controlled trial. Between the feedback and control-group we measured differences in compression depth and rate as main outcome parameters and effective compressions, correct hand position, and incomplete decompression as secondary outcome parameters. An effective compression was defined as a compression with correct depth, hand position, and decompression.

Results: The feedback-group delivered compression rates closest to the recommended guidelines (101 ± 9 vs. 109 ± 15/min, p=0.009), more effective compressions (20 ± 18 vs. 5 ± 6%, p<0.001), more compressions with correct hand position (96 ± 13 vs. 88 ± 16%, p<0.001), and less leaning (21 ± 31 vs. 77 ± 33%, p<0.001). However, only the control-group adhered to the recommended compression depth (44 ± 7 mm vs. 39 ± 6, p=0.003).

Conclusion: Use of an AED's audiovisual feedback system improved some CPR-quality parameters, thus confirming findings of earlier studies with the notable exception of decreased compression depth, which is a key parameter that might be linked to reduced cardiac output.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2011.02.023DOI Listing

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