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Introduction. Efficient organization of measures aimed at decreasing mortality from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) warrants a clear understanding of OHCA epidemiology and performance of the prehospital care system in such cases. The study was aimed at performing respective analysis and identifying the ways for improving prehospital management of OHCA in the Republic of Crimea.Material and methods. Annual data from the Crimean OHCA and Resuscitation Registry for 2018 were utilized. All OHCA cases attended by emergency medical services (EMS) with attempted cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) were included, regardless of cardiac arrest etiology or patients’ age (n=419). For ensuring conformity and comparability of the study results, data collection and analysis were executed in correspondence with the statements of the Utstein recommendations.Results. The overall incidence of EMS-attended OHCA in the Republic of Crimea was 673.3 per 100,000 population per year, the incidence of OHCA with attempted CPR – 21.9 per 100,000 population per year, the proportion of CPR attempts out of all OHCA cases – 3.3%. Mean patient age was 66.9 years, and 52.7% were male. The etiology was cardiac in 42.5% cases. In 71.8% cases OHCA was witnessed by EMS, in 25.5% – by a bystander before EMS arrival. Bystanders initiated CPR in 5.7% cases. The initial rhythm was asystole in 80.4% of all cases. When excluding EMS-witnessed cases, the mean EMS response time was 13 min. 5.0% patients had a sustained return of spontaneous circulation at hospital admission. Survival was associated with lower EMS response time (p=0.027), administration of shock (p<0.001) and advanced airway management with endotracheal tube or laryngeal mask (p=0.047).Conclusion. High incidence of OHCA, low rates of CPR commencement and low rates of survival from OHCA in the Republic of Crimea determine the necessity of implementing a comprehensive program to improve prehospital care in the region. Considering the critical relevance of early intervention in OHCA and the revealed low bystander CPR rate, the measures for involving community into the process of prehospital care should form the basis of this program.
Introduction. Efficient organization of measures aimed at decreasing mortality from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) warrants a clear understanding of OHCA epidemiology and performance of the prehospital care system in such cases. The study was aimed at performing respective analysis and identifying the ways for improving prehospital management of OHCA in the Republic of Crimea.Material and methods. Annual data from the Crimean OHCA and Resuscitation Registry for 2018 were utilized. All OHCA cases attended by emergency medical services (EMS) with attempted cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) were included, regardless of cardiac arrest etiology or patients’ age (n=419). For ensuring conformity and comparability of the study results, data collection and analysis were executed in correspondence with the statements of the Utstein recommendations.Results. The overall incidence of EMS-attended OHCA in the Republic of Crimea was 673.3 per 100,000 population per year, the incidence of OHCA with attempted CPR – 21.9 per 100,000 population per year, the proportion of CPR attempts out of all OHCA cases – 3.3%. Mean patient age was 66.9 years, and 52.7% were male. The etiology was cardiac in 42.5% cases. In 71.8% cases OHCA was witnessed by EMS, in 25.5% – by a bystander before EMS arrival. Bystanders initiated CPR in 5.7% cases. The initial rhythm was asystole in 80.4% of all cases. When excluding EMS-witnessed cases, the mean EMS response time was 13 min. 5.0% patients had a sustained return of spontaneous circulation at hospital admission. Survival was associated with lower EMS response time (p=0.027), administration of shock (p<0.001) and advanced airway management with endotracheal tube or laryngeal mask (p=0.047).Conclusion. High incidence of OHCA, low rates of CPR commencement and low rates of survival from OHCA in the Republic of Crimea determine the necessity of implementing a comprehensive program to improve prehospital care in the region. Considering the critical relevance of early intervention in OHCA and the revealed low bystander CPR rate, the measures for involving community into the process of prehospital care should form the basis of this program.
Severe combined injuries, and especially polytrauma, differ significantly from other types of injuries by high requirements for the organization of medical care at all its stages, miltidisciplinarity, high financial costs, poor short-term outcomes and long-term treatment results. Therefore, the search for new concepts, strategies and tactics for the treatment of victims is an urgent problem not only for surgeons, resuscitators and traumatologists, but also for healthcare in general. Fractures of long tubular bones accompanying severe combined injuries or polytrauma pose a lesser threat to the life of the victim than severe traumatic brain injuries or damage to internal organs, but they are the main cause of long-term treatment and disability. Such victims make up a significant group of patients-66.2%, therefore they represent a separate problem in traumatology and injury surgery. A modern solution to this problem, improving the results of treatment and the quality of life of victims after suffering a severe combined injury or polytrauma is possible on the basis of new approaches, as well as on the new ideology of osteosynthesis. In the present study, 392 minimally invasive osteosyntheses were performed in 274 patients with severe combined trauma and polytrauma. The indication was the need to fix fractures in order to create favorable conditions for rapid and lasting fusion, early functional treatment and rehabilitation of victims, and to achieve the highest possible level of quality of life after treatment. The possibility and duration of osteosynthesis were determined by the severity of the condition of the victims, assessed by objective methods: a simple clinical scale of VPH-SG or, much less often, specialized resuscitation scales of VPH-SS, SAPS or MODS. The surgical intervention was possible when the severity of the victim's condition reached the highest level of compensation: 16-30 points on the VPH-SG scale. The immediate outcomes of treatment of 274 patients with severe combined trauma and polytrauma after performing a full and final volume of surgery were good. There were no fatal outcomes. The frequency of mild local infectious complications in the field of surgical intervention was 4.0%. The average duration of inpatient treatment was 23.8±2.3 days: with closed intramedullary osteosynthesis - 19.8±0.3 days, with bone osteosynthesis - 24.2±1.2 days, with non - focal osteosynthesis-27.3±1.9 days. The long-term and anatomical and functional results of treatment were analyzed in 158 patients. There were no unsatisfactory long-term results of treatment. Good long-term results were achieved in 81.0%, satisfactory – in 19.0% of the victims. Thus, the results of the analysis of the immediate outcomes and long-term results of treatment of fractures of long tubular bones using the technology of minimally invasive osteosynthesis in patients with severe combined trauma and polytrauma demonstrated the high effectiveness of this surgical technology, on the one hand, and the direct dependence of the treatment outcomes on the severity of the injuries, the severity of the condition of the victims and the number of fractures in one victim, on the other hand.
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