Article Text
Abstract
Objectives To assess how the quality of metronome-guided cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was affected by the chest compression rate familiarised by training before the performance and to determine a possible mechanism for any effect shown.
Design Prospective crossover trial of a simulated, one-person, chest-compression-only CPR.
Setting Participants were recruited from a medical school and two paramedic schools of South Korea.
Participants 42 senior students of a medical school and two paramedic schools were enrolled but five dropped out due to physical restraints.
Intervention Senior medical and paramedic students performed 1 min of metronome-guided CPR with chest compressions only at a speed of 120 compressions/min after training for chest compression with three different rates (100, 120 and 140 compressions/min). Friedman's test was used to compare average compression depths based on the different rates used during training.
Results Average compression depths were significantly different according to the rate used in training (p<0.001). A post hoc analysis showed that average compression depths were significantly different between trials after training at a speed of 100 compressions/min and those at speeds of 120 and 140 compressions/min (both p<0.001).
Conclusions The depth of chest compression during metronome-guided CPR is affected by the relative difference between the rate of metronome guidance and the chest compression rate practised in previous training.
- Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
- Prognosis
- Education
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