Early insertion of a supraglottic airway (SGA) device could improve chest compression fraction by allowing providers to perform continuous chest compressions or by shortening the interruptions needed to deliver ventilations. SGA devices do not require the same expertise as endotracheal intubation. This study aimed to determine whether the immediate insertion of an i-gel while providing continuous chest compressions with asynchronous ventilations could generate higher CCFs than the standard 30:2 approach using a face-mask in a simulation of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. A multicentre, parallel, randomised, superiority, simulation study was carried out. The primary outcome was the difference in CCF during the first two minutes of resuscitation. Overall and per-cycle CCF quality of compressions and ventilations parameters were also compared. Among thirteen teams of two participants, the early insertion of an i-gel resulted in higher CCFs during the first two minutes (89.0% vs. 83.6%, = 0.001). Overall and per-cycle CCF were consistently higher in the i-gel group, even after the 30:2 alternation had been resumed. In the i-gel group, ventilation parameters were enhanced, but compressions were significantly shallower (4.6 cm vs. 5.2 cm, = 0.007). This latter issue must be addressed before clinical trials can be considered.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8745715PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm11010217DOI Listing

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