Advanced cardiac life support

(Redirected from Advanced Life Support)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Advanced cardiac life support
Star of Life

WikiDoc Resources for Advanced cardiac life support

Articles

Most recent articles on Advanced cardiac life support

Most cited articles on Advanced cardiac life support

Review articles on Advanced cardiac life support

Articles on Advanced cardiac life support in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Advanced cardiac life support

Images of Advanced cardiac life support

Photos of Advanced cardiac life support

Podcasts & MP3s on Advanced cardiac life support

Videos on Advanced cardiac life support

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Advanced cardiac life support

Bandolier on Advanced cardiac life support

TRIP on Advanced cardiac life support

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Advanced cardiac life support at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Advanced cardiac life support

Clinical Trials on Advanced cardiac life support at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Advanced cardiac life support

NICE Guidance on Advanced cardiac life support

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Advanced cardiac life support

CDC on Advanced cardiac life support

Books

Books on Advanced cardiac life support

News

Advanced cardiac life support in the news

Be alerted to news on Advanced cardiac life support

News trends on Advanced cardiac life support

Commentary

Blogs on Advanced cardiac life support

Definitions

Definitions of Advanced cardiac life support

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Advanced cardiac life support

Discussion groups on Advanced cardiac life support

Patient Handouts on Advanced cardiac life support

Directions to Hospitals Treating Advanced cardiac life support

Risk calculators and risk factors for Advanced cardiac life support

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Advanced cardiac life support

Causes & Risk Factors for Advanced cardiac life support

Diagnostic studies for Advanced cardiac life support

Treatment of Advanced cardiac life support

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Advanced cardiac life support

International

Advanced cardiac life support en Espanol

Advanced cardiac life support en Francais

Business

Advanced cardiac life support in the Marketplace

Patents on Advanced cardiac life support

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Advanced cardiac life support

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Synonyms and keywords: ACLS

Overview

Advanced cardiac life support or (ACLS) refers to a set of clinical interventions for the urgent treatment of cardiac arrest and other life threatening medical emergencies, as well as the knowledge and skills to deploy those interventions.[1] Extensive medical knowledge and rigorous hands-on training and practice are required to master ACLS. Only qualified health care providers (e.g. physicians, paramedics, nurses, respiratory therapists and other specially trained health care providers) can provide ACLS, as it requires the ability to manage the patient's airway, initiate IV access, read and interpret electrocardiograms, and understand emergency pharmacology.

General consideration

  • ACLS is an extension of BLS. Some health professionals, or even lay rescuers, may be trained in basic life support (BLS), especially cardiopulmonary resuscitation or CPR.
  • When a sudden cardiac arrest occurs, immediate CPR is a vital link in the chain of survival. Another important link is early defibrillation, which has improved greatly with the widespread availability of AEDs. It often starts with analysing patient's heart rhythms with a manual defibrillator.
  • In contrast to an AED in BLS, where the machine decides when and how to shock a patient, the ACLS team leader makes those decisions based on rhythms on the monitor and patient's vital signs.
  • The next steps in ACLS are insertion of intravenous (IV) lines and placement of various airway devices.
  • Commonly used ACLS drugs, such as epinephrine and atropine, are then administered. At this time, the ACLS personnel quickly search for possible causes of cardiac arrest (e.g., a heart attack, drug overdose, or trauma).
  • Based on their diagnosis, more specific treatments are given. These treatments may be medical such as IV injection of an antidote for drug overdose, or surgical such as insertion of a chest tube for those with tension pneumothoraces or hemothoraces.
  • While the above mentioned ACLS steps are being carried out, it is crucial to continue chest compression with minimal interruptions. This point is emphasized repeately in the new ACLS guidelines (see below)
  • As the new guidelines acknowledge, only the basic interventions of CPR and early defibrillation have been shown to improve survival from cardiac arrest.[2]
  • The new Guidelines were published in December 2005 and may be found in Circulation

[3]. The major source for ACLS courses and textbooks in the United States is the American Heart Association; in Europe, it is the European Resuscitation Council (ERC). An ACLS Provider Manual reflecting the new Guidelines is now available.

  • The American College of Emergency Physicians is also a respected source of credentialing and training in ACLS

Main algorithm

ALS presumes that basic life support (bag-mask administration of oxygen and chest compressions) are administered.

The main algorithm of ALS, which is invoked when actual cardiac arrest has been established, relies on the monitoring of the electrical activity of the heart on a cardiac monitor. Depending on the type of cardiac arrhythmia, defibrillation is applied, and medication is administered. Oxygen is administered and endotracheal intubation may be attempted to secure the airway. At regular intervals, the effect of the treatment on the heart rhythm, as well as the presence of cardiac output, is assessed.

Medication that may be administered may include adrenaline (epinephrine), amiodarone, atropine, bicarbonate, calcium, potassium and magnesium. Saline or colloids may be administered to increase the circulating volume.

While CPR is given (either manually, or through automated equipment such as AutoPulse), members of the team consider eight forms of potentially reversible causes for cardiac arrest, commonly abbreviated as "4H4T":

The advanced cardiac life support cases

Ventricular fibrillation

Ventricular fibrillation/Pulseless Ventricular tachycardia

Unstable tachycardia

Stable tachycardia

Pulseless electrical activity

Asystole

Bradycardia

Acute coronary syndrome

Acute stroke

Respiratory arrest

Other conditions

ALS also covers various conditions related to cardiac arrest, such as cardiac arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia), poisoning and effectively all conditions that may lead to cardiac arrest if untreated, apart from the truly surgical emergencies (which are covered by Advanced Trauma Life Support).

References

  1. ACLS: Principles and Practice. p. 1. Dallas: American Heart Association, 2003. ISBN 0-87493-341-2.
  2. Stiell IG, Wells GA, Field B, et al. Advanced cardiac life support in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. N Engl J Med 2004; 351:647-56.Article
  3. Circulation 112: Issue 24 Supplement; December 13, 2005 Issue.

External links

CME Category::Cardiology