# Is It Feasible to Perform Infant CPR during Transfer on a Stretcher until Cannulation for Extracorporeal CPR? A Randomization Simulation Study

**Authors:** Myriam Santos-Folgar, Felipe Fernández-Méndez, Martín Otero-Agra, Roberto Barcala-Furelos, Antonio Rodríguez-Núñez

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/children11070865 · 2024-07-17

## TL;DR

This study found that performing CPR on an infant while moving on a stretcher is possible but results in lower ventilation quality compared to stationary CPR.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel simulation approach to assess the feasibility and quality of infant CPR during stretcher transport.

## Key findings

- Chest compression quality was similar during stretcher transport and stationary CPR.
- Ventilation quality was significantly worse during stretcher transport.
- Overall CPR quality was lower during stretcher transport due to poor ventilation.

## Abstract

Introduction: Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) improves infant survival outcomes after cardiac arrest. If not feasible at the place of arrest, victims must be transported to a suitable room to perform ECMO while effective, sustained resuscitation maneuvers are performed. The objective of this simulation study was to compare the quality of resuscitation maneuvers on an infant manikin during simulated transfer on a stretcher (stretcher test) within a hospital versus standard stationary resuscitation maneuvers (control test). Methods: A total of 26 nursing students participated in a randomized crossover study. In pairs, the rescuers performed two 2 min tests, consisting of five rescue breaths followed by cycles of 15 compressions and two breaths. The analysis focused on CPR variables (chest compression and ventilation), CPR quality, the rate of perceived exertion and the distance covered. Results: No differences were observed in the chest compression quality variable (82 ± 10% versus 84 ± 11%, p = 0.15). However, significantly worse values were observed in the test for ventilation quality on the stretcher (18 ± 14%) compared to the control test (28 ± 21%), with a value of p = 0.030. Therefore, the overall CPR quality was worse in the stretcher test (50 ± 9%) than in the control test (56 ± 13%) (p = 0.025). Conclusions: Infant CPR performed by nursing students while walking alongside a moving stretcher is possible. However, in this model, the global CPR quality is less due to the low ventilation quality.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cardiac arrest (MESH:D006323)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11276386/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11276386