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8
result(s) for
"Chollet-Xemard, Charlotte"
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The medical response to multisite terrorist attacks in Paris
by
Hirsch, Martin
,
Yordanov, Youri
,
Fleury, Nadia
in
Attitude of Health Personnel
,
Emergencies
,
Emergency medical care
2015
Friday, Nov 13, 2015. It's 2130 h when the Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris (APHP) is alerted to the explosions that have just occurred at the Stade de France, a stadium in Saint-Denis just outside Paris. Within 20 min, there are shootings at four sites and three bloody explosions in the capital. At 2140 h, a massacre takes place and hundreds of people are held hostage for 3 h in Bataclan concert hall.
Journal Article
Etomidate versus ketamine for rapid sequence intubation in acutely ill patients: a multicentre randomised controlled trial
by
Anguel, Nadia
,
Maxime, Virginie
,
Bertrand, Lionel
in
Adrenal Insufficiency - chemically induced
,
Adrenal Insufficiency - epidemiology
,
Aged
2009
Critically ill patients often require emergency intubation. The use of etomidate as the sedative agent in this context has been challenged because it might cause a reversible adrenal insufficiency, potentially associated with increased in-hospital morbidity. We compared early and 28-day morbidity after a single dose of etomidate or ketamine used for emergency endotracheal intubation of critically ill patients.
In this randomised, controlled, single-blind trial, 655 patients who needed sedation for emergency intubation were prospectively enrolled from 12 emergency medical services or emergency departments and 65 intensive care units in France. Patients were randomly assigned by a computerised random-number generator list to receive 0·3 mg/kg of etomidate (n=328) or 2 mg/kg of ketamine (n=327) for intubation. Only the emergency physician enrolling patients was aware of group assignment. The primary endpoint was the maximum score of the sequential organ failure assessment during the first 3 days in the intensive care unit. We excluded from the analysis patients who died before reaching the hospital or those discharged from the intensive care unit before 3 days (modified intention to treat). This trial is registered with
ClinicalTrials.gov, number
NCT00440102.
234 patients were analysed in the etomidate group and 235 in the ketamine group. The mean maximum SOFA score between the two groups did not differ significantly (10·3 [SD 3·7] for etomidate
vs 9·6 [3·9] for ketamine; mean difference 0·7 [95% CI 0·0–1·4], p=0·056). Intubation conditions did not differ significantly between the two groups (median intubation difficulty score 1 [IQR 0–3] in both groups; p=0·70). The percentage of patients with adrenal insufficiency was significantly higher in the etomidate group than in the ketamine group (OR 6·7, 3·5–12·7). We recorded no serious adverse events with either study drug.
Our results show that ketamine is a safe and valuable alternative to etomidate for endotracheal intubation in critically ill patients, and should be considered in those with sepsis.
French Ministry of Health.
Journal Article
Evaluation of the effectiveness of potassium chloride in the management of out-of hospital cardiac arrest by refractory ventricular fibrillation: Study protocol of the POTACREH study
by
Jouffroy, Romain
,
Treluyer, Jean-Marc
,
Elie, Caroline
in
Abnormalities
,
Amiodarone
,
Amiodarone - therapeutic use
2023
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has a poor prognosis, with an overall survival rate of about 5% at discharge. Shockable rhythm cardiac arrests (ventricular fibrillation (VF) and pulseless ventricular tachycardia (VT)) have a better prognosis. In case of shockable rhythm, treatment is based on defibrillation, and thereafter, in case of failure of 3 external electric shocks (EES), on direct intravenous administration of 300 mg amiodarone, or lidocaine when amiodarone is unavailable or inefficient. During surgical procedures under extracorporeal circulation, a high potassium cardioplegia solution is administered to interrupt cardiac activity and facilitate surgical procedure. By extension, direct intravenous administration of potassium chloride (KCl) has been shown to convert VF, resulting in return to a hemodynamically efficient organized heart rate within a few minutes. The aim of this study is to provide clinical evidence that direct intravenous injection of KCl, into a patient presenting with OHCA due to refractory VF although 3 EES, should interrupt this VF and then allow rapid restauration of an organized heart rhythm, and thus return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC).
A multicenter, prospective, single group, phase 2 study will be conducted on 81 patients presenting with refractory VF. After failure of 3 EES, each patient will receive direct intravenous injection of 20 mmol KCl instead of amiodarone. The primary outcome will be survival rate at hospital admission. Major secondary outcomes will include ROSC and time to ROSC in the prehospital setting, number of VF recidivism after KCl injection, survival rate at hospital discharge with a good neurologic prognostic, and survival rate 3 months after hospital discharge with a good neurologic prognostic.
No patient is currently included in the study.
Conventional guideline strategy based on antiarrhythmic drug administration, i.e. amiodarone or lidocaine, for OHCA due to shockable rhythm, has not yet demonstrated an increase in survival at hospital admission or at hospital discharge. This may be related to the major cardiodepressant effect of those drugs.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04316611. Registered on March 2020. AP-HP180577 / N° EUDRACT: 2019-002544-24. Funded by the French Health Ministry. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04316611.
Journal Article
Efficacy and tolerance of early administration of tranexamic acid in patients with cirrhosis presenting with acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding: a study protocol for a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (the EXARHOSE study)
2018
IntroductionThe management of acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) is challenging in patients with cirrhosis, as it is responsible for severe complications and high mortality rates. Tranexamic acid (TXA) may help control the bleeding by counterbalancing cirrhosis-related hyperfibrinolysis. Still, there is a lack of unbiased data to conclude on its efficacy. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of TXA in the early treatment of acute UGIB in patients with cirrhosis.Methods and analysisThis study is a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, for adult patients with cirrhosis presenting with an acute UGIB and allocated to one of two arms: TXA or placebo (saline). Physicians from emergency mobile services, emergency departments (EDs) or intensive care units (ICUs) can include patients. Besides study intervention, standard care for UGIB will be performed as recommended. Intervention will consist an intravenous infusion of 10 mL of TXA (1 g) or saline, immediately followed by three identical intravenous infusions over 8 hours each (total dose of 4 g of TXA or 40 mL of placebo over 24 hours). Main analyses will be conducted in intention to treat on every patient included, then in modified intention to treat on patients with underlying lesion of portal hypertension visualised by endoscopy. The main objective is to show efficacy of TXA until day 5 on a composite criterion (bleeding control, rebleeding episodes and mortality). Secondary objectives aim at showing the efficacy of TXA on each individual component of the main outcome measure and others at 6 weeks and later (transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt procedure, cirrhosis-specific complications, length of stay in ICU and in hospital, safety and tolerance of TXA, liver transplantation). Included patients will be followed up to 1 year after inclusion.500 patients will be necessary to show a reduction in the prevalence of the primary outcome from 30% to 18% with a bilateral alpha risk of 5% and a power of 80%.Ethics and disseminationEthical approval has been obtained from the Comité de Protection des Personnes Ile-de-France 1 (CPP-IDF1). Results will be disseminated via publications in peer-review medical journals and scientific forums.Protocol versionThis protocol is based on the latest version, as established on 11 October 2017 and validated by the IRB CPP Ile-de-France 1.Trial registration number NCT03023189.
Journal Article
EMS Access Constraints And Response Time Delays For Deprived Critically Ill Patients Near Paris, France
2020
Increased emergency medical services (EMS) response times and areas of low socioeconomic status are both associated with poorer outcomes for several time-sensitive medical conditions attended to by medical personnel before a patient is hospitalized. We evaluated the association between EMS response times, area deprivation level, and on-scene access constraints encountered by EMS in a large urban area in France. We conducted a multicenter prospective cohort study of EMS dispatches occurring in the forty-seven cities in a region southeast of Paris. We fit multilevel mixed-effects linear regression models for multivariate assessment of the predictors of EMS response times and then used multivariate logistic regression on outcomes among a subgroup of patients presenting with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. We found evidence that access constraints were more frequently encountered by EMS in the most deprived areas compared to less deprived ones, and were associated with increased EMS response times until patient contact and with poorer outcomes from cardiac arrest. Strategies to anticipate and overcome access constraints should be implemented to improve outcomes for emergent conditions attended to by prehospital medical teams.
Journal Article
Analysis of an urban emergency medical system by using discrete simulation
2011
The emergency medical service in France (called SAMU-Service d'Aide Médicale Urgente) is a public service responsible for provision of basic life support to all emergency requests, essentially external from health units. This paper applies discrete simulation techniques to study the configuration and operation of a SAMU in France, analyzing the performance of the system and investigating alternative configurations and dispatching policies for its operations. In particular, we evaluate the fraction of calls are responded within a threshold time T (varying from 10 to 25 minutes), with special concern to cardiac arrest emergencies, and the utilization rates of medical equips. It is show that, modifications on the configuration such as decentralization of medical equips, and modifications on the dispatching can result in significant improvements for the performance measures under analysis. 1 Introduction The emergency medical services (EMS) are considered efficient if they arrive in the emergency requests location as rapid as possible transporting specialized personal and equipment (e.g.; doctor, rescuers, medicines, oxygen…). In additional, an ambulance must be able to transport the patient to a suitable hospital or clinic. Conversely, EMS managers must often to balance the benefits of providing a suitable care as quickly as possible and their costs related to medical resources and capacity (more ambulances and specialists, stations, better training of personnel, improved equipments) in the system. In France, the main pre-hospital care operations external of health care units (hospitals, clinics) are under the management of the SAMU. One of the major concerns of these systems is related to response time (interval between the arrival of the request and the arrival of medical equip at the site where the emergency occurs). As mentioned in [8], other performance measures to an EMS are: the balance of ambulance workloads, the fraction of calls not serviced by the system (lo