PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Paramedics can play a key role in speedy care for heart attack patients

By activating helicopter EMS from the field, or smaller hospital, EMS reduces time to treatment

2012-03-22
(Press-News.org) CINCINNATI—Health care practitioners have long understood the importance of "door to balloon" time for heart attack patients—the faster they can get the patient from the door of the hospital to a catheterization lab to open a clogged artery, the better the patient will do.

But a University of Cincinnati (UC) emergency medicine researcher says it's also important to study the "medical contact to balloon" time, acknowledging the role that emergency medical services (EMS) responders play in speeding patient care.

In a paper published online in the journal Academic Emergency Medicine, assistant professor Jason McMullan, MD, found that EMS responders can play a significant role in reducing medical contact to balloon (MCTB) time by activating helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) earlier in the patient care process.

The research focused on patients with a ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), a type of heart attack caused by a sudden, total blockage of a coronary artery. The American Heart Association and American College of Cardiologists have set a goal of 90 minutes to open the artery by stent in a catheterization lab (known as percutaneous coronary intervention, or PCI).

"There's a saying doctors have when taking care of a heart attack patient: time is muscle," says McMullan. "This is because doctors race to open a clogged vessel in the heart to minimize permanent damage. The quicker you can open the clogged vessel, the more muscle you can save."

Small hospitals without PCI capabilities frequently use HEMS, such as UC Health Air Care & Mobile Care, to rush heart attack victims to larger hospitals for advanced treatment. But in a study published last year, McMullan and researchers found that hospital-activated HEMS transfer does not guarantee treatment within the 90-minute goal.

In this study, researchers from UC's Department of Emergency Medicine and UC Health Air Care found that if paramedics call for Air Care to meet them either at the smaller hospital or in the field, the time to get advanced care could be sped up by 48 minutes.

In multicenter retrospective chart review, the team studied cases of STEMI patients transferred by Air Care from local hospitals to PCI centers (hospital-initiated). They then modeled the potential medical contact to balloon times for two scenarios: if the EMS crews had requested HEMS transport directly from the scene to a PCI-capable hospital or if the EMS crew had the helicopter meet them at the local non-PCI hospital.

In the reviewed cases, the actual MCTB median time for 36 hospital-initiated transfers was 160 minutes, whereas the median MCTB time for the scene response scenario was estimated at 112 minutes. The median MCTB time for the hospital rendezvous scenario was estimated as 113 minutes.

"Both of the modeled strategies with EMS crews could result in meaningful time savings for patient care," says McMullan, "but neither strategy was superior, meaning individual communities can determine which method is best based on their unique needs and capabilities."

While the goal is to have every patient reach advanced care within 90 minutes, McMullan says researchers will continue to study multiple ways to reach the recommended time, including further study on the best transfer procedures and the benefits of giving STEMI patients fibrinolytics therapy at non-PCI hospitals before transfer.

"There is still a lot that smaller hospitals can do for heart attack victims," says McMullan, "and these hospitals will always be a strong link in the chain of care. But, if a person will need to be transferred for ultimate care, EMS activation of helicopter EMS can significantly speed up the process."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mercury's surprising core and landscape curiosities

2012-03-22
Washington, D.C.—On March 17, the tiny MESSENGER spacecraft completed its primary mission to orbit and observe the planet Mercury for one Earth-year. The bounty of surprises from the mission has completely altered our understanding of the solar system's innermost planet. As reported in one of two papers published today on Science Express, scientists have found that Mercury's core, already suspected to occupy a greater fraction of the planet's interior than do the cores of Earth, Venus, or Mars, is even larger than anticipated. The companion paper shows that the elevation ...

Study on swirls to optimize contacts between fluids

2012-03-22
Physicists who have studied the mixing between two incompatible fluids have found that it is possible to control the undercurrents of one circulating fluid to optimise its exposure to the other. This work, which is about to be published in EPJ E¹, was performed by Jorge Peixinho from CNRS at Le Havre University, France, and his colleagues from the Benjamin Levich Institute, City University of New York, USA. The authors compared quantitative experimental observations of a viscous fluid, similar to honey, with numerical simulations. They focused on a fluid, which partially ...

U of I study: Distiller's grain safe for pigs, even with sulfur content

2012-03-22
URBANA – University of Illinois research reports that swine producers can feed distiller's dried grain with solubles (DDGS) to their pigs without concern for sulfur content. "When you buy DDGS, you don't have to be concerned about the level of sulfur it contains because there doesn't appear to be any impact on pig performance," said U of I animal sciences professor Hans Stein. According to the researcher, DDGS, a co-product of the ethanol industry, is used as a feed ingredient in diets fed to swine. To maintain a stable pH in fermentation vats, ethanol producers ...

Military analytics expert says billions in supply chain efficiency reduce Pentagon cuts

Military analytics expert says billions in supply chain efficiency reduce Pentagon cuts
2012-03-22
The Defense Department, faced with cuts of what Secretary Leon Panetta said could be $487 billion over the next ten years, can find tens of billions of dollars in cost reductions by better aligning the Pentagon supply chain rather than imposing precipitous reductions to the uniformed forces, according to a former Army colonel who is speaking at a conference hosted by the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS®), the premier organization for advanced analytics professionals. The INFORMS Military Applications Society Conference takes place ...

What makes a successful pregnancy?

2012-03-22
Amsterdam, NL, 21 March, 2012 – Fertility problems, recurrent miscarriages, and pregnancy complications can occur when maternal immunological tolerance of the fetus is impaired. Gérard Chaouat and colleagues from Inserm et Assistance Publique et Université Paris Sud Orsay, Hopital Antoine Bèclère, Clamart Cedex, France (now in Hopital Saint Louis, Paris), trace the evolution of the science of reproductive immunology to show how the current understanding of maternal-fetal tolerance/dialogue has developed, and its implications for the treatment of infertility disorders. ...

'Nanoslinky': A novel nanofluidic technology for DNA manipulation and measurement

Nanoslinky: A novel nanofluidic technology for DNA manipulation and measurement
2012-03-22
Remember Slinky®, the coiled metal spring that "walks" down stairs with just a push, momentum and gravity? Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have developed their own version of this classic—albeit 10 million times smaller—as a novel technology for manipulating and measuring DNA molecules and other nanoscale (billionth of a meter) materials. In the first of two recent papers,* Samuel Stavis, Elizabeth Strychalski and colleagues demonstrated that a nanoscale fluidic channel shaped like a staircase with many steps (developed previously ...

An Easy Way to Make Custom Vinyl Lettering

2012-03-22
http://vinylletter.net specializes making custom vinyl lettering. With http://vinylletter.net what you see is what you get online editor, you can easily custom whole piece vinyl letter you want. We promise quality and fast delivery. http://vinylletter.net can let you specify letter spacing and line spacing for your vinyl lettering. ...

Sexual offenses between inmates occur less often in states that allow conjugal visitation

2012-03-22
Could widespread conjugal visitation reduce sexual offending in prisons? It's a possibility, according to Stewart D'Alessio and his team from Florida International University in the US. Their work shows that in states where conjugal visits are permitted, there are significantly fewer instances of reported rape and other sexual offenses in their prisons. The study is published online in Springer's American Journal of Criminal Justice. At present, there are two opposing theories of the causes of sexual violence. The feminist perspective asserts that sexual violence is motivated ...

Stress management for breast cancer patients may affect disease course

2012-03-22
CORAL GABLES, FL (March 21, 2012)—A team of researchers led by Michael H. Antoni, director of the Center for Psycho-Oncology Research at the University of Miami (UM) has shown that a stress management program tailored to women with breast cancer can alter tumor-promoting processes at the molecular level. The new study recently published in the journal Biological Psychiatry is one of the first to link psychological intervention with genetic expression in cancer patients. According to the study, the group-based Cognitive-Behavioral Stress Management (CBSM) intervention ...

Cardinal Web Solutions Reminds Businesses the Clock is Ticking to Adapt on Facebook

Cardinal Web Solutions Reminds Businesses the Clock is Ticking to Adapt on Facebook
2012-03-22
According to Cardinal Web Solutions, an Internet marketing firm in Atlanta, all business pages on Facebook will be converted to the Timeline format on March 30th 2012. While this may be the biggest change from a visual standpoint, the changes to features and the heretofore virtually unlimited versatility that has made Facebook an essential social media marketing tool will be a hard pill to swallow for many businesses. Communications sent thru Facebook by businesses are being throttled to 16% per month of current Facebook fans that have "liked" your page. This ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Childhood poverty and/or parental mental illness may double teens’ risk of violence and police contact

Fizzy water might aid weight loss by boosting glucose uptake and metabolism

Muscular strength and good physical fitness linked to lower risk of death in people with cancer

Recommendations for studying the impact of AI on young people's mental health  proposed by Oxford researchers

Trump clusters: How an English lit graduate used AI to make sense of Twitter bios

Empty headed? Largest study of its kind proves ‘bird brain’ is a misnomer

Wild baboons not capable of visual self-awareness when viewing their own reflection

$14 million supports work to diversify human genome research

New study uncovers key mechanism behind learning and memory

Seeing the unseen: New method reveals ’hyperaccessible’ window in freshly replicated DNA

Extreme climate pushed thousands of lakes in West Greenland ‘across a tipping point,’ study finds

Illuminating an asymmetric gap in a topological antiferromagnet

Global public health collaboration benefits Americans, SHEA urges continued support of the World Health Organization

Astronomers thought they understood fast radio bursts. A recent one calls that into question.

AAAS announces addition of Journal of EMDR Practice and Research to Science Partner Journal program

Study of deadly dog cancer reveals new clues for improved treatment

Skin-penetrating nematodes have a love-hate relationship with carbon dioxide

Fewer than 1% of U.S. clinical drug trials enroll pregnant participants, study finds

A global majority trusts scientists, wants them to have greater role in policymaking, study finds

Transforming China’s food system: Healthy diets lead the way

Time to boost cancer vaccine work, declare UK researchers

Colorado State receives $326M from DOE/EPA to improve oil and gas operations and reduce methane emissions

Research assesses how infertility treatments can affect family and work relationships

New findings shed light on cell health: Key insights into the recycling process inside cells

Human papillomavirus infection kinetics revealed in new longitudinal study

Antibiotics modulate E. coli’s resistance to phages

Building sentence structure may be language-specific

Biotin may shield brain from manganese-induced damage, study finds

Treatment for children with obesity has lasting effect

Spotted hyena found in Egypt for the first time in 5,000 years

[Press-News.org] Paramedics can play a key role in speedy care for heart attack patients
By activating helicopter EMS from the field, or smaller hospital, EMS reduces time to treatment