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Lecture given at ACEP 2016 in Las Vegas, USA.
The current algorithm we use to resuscitate patients in cardiac arrest, follows a “one-size fits all” approach. We treat all pulseless patients the same way, regardless of their underlying physiology or their response to our therapies. In the current presentation I briefly review the existing evidence to support the incorporation of intra-arrest monitoring to allow feedback regarding the effectiveness of our interventions and therefore the potential for a Goal-Directed Approach. In this case-based presentation I propose the use of invasive arterial blood pressure goals as well as the use of continuous TEE in order to provide a patient-centered resuscitation approach.
Speaker: Felipe Teran-Merino , MD
Instructor of Emergency Medicine, Fellow in Emergency Ultrasound
Divisions of Emergency Critical Care and Emergency Ultrasound
Department of Emergency Medicine
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY
Volg deze spreker op Twitter: @FTeranMD
Lecture given at ACEP 2016 in Las Vegas, USA.
The current algorithm we use to resuscitate patients in cardiac arrest, follows a “one-size fits all” approach. We treat all pulseless patients the same way, regardless of their underlying physiology or their response to our therapies. In the current presentation I briefly review the existing evidence to support the incorporation of intra-arrest monitoring to allow feedback regarding the effectiveness of our interventions and therefore the potential for a Goal-Directed Approach. In this case-based presentation I propose the use of invasive arterial blood pressure goals as well as the use of continuous TEE in order to provide a patient-centered resuscitation approach.
Speaker: Felipe Teran-Merino , MD
Instructor of Emergency Medicine, Fellow in Emergency Ultrasound
Divisions of Emergency Critical Care and Emergency Ultrasound
Department of Emergency Medicine
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY
Volg deze spreker op Twitter: @FTeranMD