View clinical trials related to Sudden Cardiac Arrest.
Filter by:Some of the patients affected by Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) with ventricular fibrillation (VF)/ventricular tachycardia (VT) do not respond to initial defibrillation. The survival decreases with number of defibrillations required to terminate VF/VT. In 2022, one prospective cluster randomized trial showed increased survival among (OHCA) patients in refractory VF using Double Sequential Defibrillation (DSD). To evaluate feasibility and safety this randomized pilot trial will compare the effect of double defibrillation strategy initiated as soon as possible after the first defibrillation with continued resuscitation using standard defibrillation, in patients with Out of Hospital Cardiac arrest (OHCA). The results from this pilot trial will form the basis for design of a larger multicenter survival study.
The overall goal of this project is to design, develop, and pilot test an emergency healthcare drone delivery system suitable for rural communities that can deliver AEDs to out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) locations more rapidly than can be achieved with current first responder and EMS systems. The goal is to determine whether this method of AED delivery can be achieved rapidly enough to justify a future clinical trial directly testing its ability to improve OHCA survival.
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) account for over 60% of deaths from coronary artery disease. The annual incidence of OHCA treated by Emergency Medical Systems (EMS) is 41-89 per 100,000 population. Outcome of OHCA and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is very poor: Less than 1/3 of the victims regain spontaneous circulation (ROSC), 40-60% of those achieving ROSC suffer significant neurological disability due to brain hypoxia and only 1.7-6.4% are discharged from the hospital. In order to minimize hypoxia time, the primary goal of CPR is to achieve return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) as fast as possible. Metabolic (lactic) acidosis develops rapidly during CA and is considered detrimental to CPR outcome. Sodium bicarbonate (SB), a generic, commonly used acid buffer, was subjected only to a single, small, prospective controlled trial that found a trend towards improved outcome in prolonged OHCA and CPR. Another study indicated that EMS's that used SB early and often during CPR had significantly higher ROSC rates and better long-term outcome compared with EMS's that used SB more seldom and administered it late in the course of CPR. Aim of the Study: To determine whether early administration of SB during OHCA and CPR improves short-term CPR outcome.