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The Resus Room

Ultrasound in Cardiac Arrest; Roadside to Resus

The Resus Room

Simon Laing

Science, Emergencymedicine, Medicine, Health & Fitness, Em, Ae

4.8678 Ratings

🗓️ 20 July 2020

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The more you delve into cardiac arrest, the more it seems that delivering the essentials well is the key to great outcomes; timely recognition, high quality chest compressions, with early and appropriate defibrillation.

But is ultrasound in cardiac arrest a layer that we should all be adding in as a standard. It holds the potential to not only prognose outcomes from cardiac arrest, both medical and traumatic, but also to add a level of diagnosis of potentially reversible causes.

In this podcast we chat through the evidence surrounding ultrasound in cardiac arrest and consider the practicalities of application during delivery of patient care.

Make sure to take a look at the references and resources below.

Enjoy!

Simon, Rob & James

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the recess room podcast.

0:03.5

Five, four, three, two, one, fire.

0:11.0

So hi, and welcome back to the recess room podcast.

0:14.4

I'm Simon Lang.

0:15.6

I'm Rob Fenwick.

0:16.6

And I'm James Yates.

0:17.6

And tonight we're going to be talking about ultrasound in cardiac arrest. Indeed, it is a James Yates. And tonight, we're going to be talking about ultrasound in cardiac arrest.

0:22.8

Indeed, it is a James Yates master class in ultrasound and cardiac arrest.

0:27.5

I cannot wait.

0:28.2

Obviously, there's been a massive buildup on social media, so I cannot wait to get stuck into this.

0:32.5

I'm sat here ready to learn, my friend.

0:34.7

I am just the glue to stick you two geniuses together, so don't worry,

0:38.5

you know. That's very generous. What a generous glue you are, my friend. You might want to put

0:45.5

a roller tape round that as well. Talking about glue, we've just had a fascinating discussion about how to

0:51.1

fix some holes in plasterboards with glue and the technique that James

0:54.8

has employed in it. So you never know. We might come back to that in a different episode or even

0:58.9

tag it on at the end. Just learn an awful lot already. I'm not getting involved in that. Before we get

1:04.3

started, a huge thanks to SJ. Trem, the Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine,

1:10.7

who are free open access journal publishing articles on all the sorts of things that we cover

1:15.1

here on the recess room, go over and have a look at their website on the hyperlink on our site

1:19.4

to check out all of their great free work. So without further ado, let's crack on with the podcast.

1:28.8

So as we alluded to in the initial introduction, we are looking today at ultrasound

...

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