Gaining on Death, Cooling Therapy Catches on Slowly

Written by pennmedicinenews on August 27, 2010 – 2:36 pm -

According to Reuters.com, most of the “300,000 Americans who suffer cardiac arrest every year die. Despite massive investments in research and technology, fewer than eight in 100 leave the hospital alive, a rate that has remained stagnant for almost 30 years.” Even if the heart is restarted, most won’t make it and many of those who do end up brain damaged. Many feel these statistics could change if more people had access therapeutic hypothermia. The procedure, refined and researched at Penn, is the cooling of a patient to about six degrees Fahrenheit with cold intravenous saline, cooling blankets or ice packs and then waiting 24 hours before warming the patient slowly. "That's a lot of people going home to their families who otherwise would have died or had severe brain injury," said Benjamin S. Abella, MD, MPhil, assistant professor, Emergency Medicine and clinical research director of the Center for Resuscitation Science, who is quote throughout the article.

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Posted in 2010, Pen Medicine, august, benjamin_abella, center_for_resuscitation_science, communications_placement, emergency_medicine, fy11, highlights, in-the-news, patient_care, q1, reuters | Comments Off

Gaining on Death, Cooling Therapy Catches on Slowly

Written by pennmedicinenews on August 27, 2010 – 2:36 pm -

According to Reuters.com, most of the “300,000 Americans who suffer cardiac arrest every year die. Despite massive investments in research and technology, fewer than eight in 100 leave the hospital alive, a rate that has remained stagnant for almost 30 years.” Even if the heart is restarted, most won’t make it and many of those who do end up brain damaged. Many feel these statistics could change if more people had access therapeutic hypothermia. The procedure, refined and researched at Penn, is the cooling of a patient to about six degrees Fahrenheit with cold intravenous saline, cooling blankets or ice packs and then waiting 24 hours before warming the patient slowly. "That's a lot of people going home to their families who otherwise would have died or had severe brain injury," said Benjamin S. Abella, MD, MPhil, assistant professor, Emergency Medicine and clinical research director of the Center for Resuscitation Science, who is quote throughout the article.

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Posted in 2010, Pen Medicine, august, benjamin_abella, center_for_resuscitation_science, communications_placement, emergency_medicine, fy11, highlights, in-the-news, patient_care, q1, reuters | Comments Off

Hypothermia: Medicine’s Cold-hearted Comeback from Cardiac Capture <<>>

Written by pennmedicinenews on March 29, 2010 – 2:10 pm -

Benjamin Abella, MD, an assistant professor of Predicament Drug and clinical explore chairman in the Center for Resuscitation Science, is quoted in a USA Today romance detailing advances in the use of therapeutical hypothermia to preserve brain behave following cardiac bust. Even though adoption of the technology remains soporific in hospitals across the domain – experts guess that less than 20 percent of patients who could further make the treatment -- Abella says he's seeing a 40 to 50 percent survival classification among patients cooled at HUP, a scold in line with studies that own analyzed the technique's effectiveness. "We have survivors who 20 years ago would be leaving the sanatorium badly crippled by wit injury," he says <<>>

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Posted in 2010, Pen Medicine, benjamin_abella, center_for_resuscitation_science, communications_placement, emergency_medicine, highlights, hup, in-the-news, march, patient_care, research, usa_today | Comments Off

Hands-Only CPR Saves Lives <<>>

Written by pennmedicinenews on October 28, 2009 – 2:17 pm -

Benjamin Abella, MD, an connect with professor of Exigency Medicine and clinical research cicerone in the Center for Resuscitation Science, appeared contemporary on NBC’s The Today Pretension to argue the how bystanders can use simple, "hands-only" CPR to spare lives from cardiac take in. “CPR can double and despite triple the turn of survival,” Abella says. “You at bottom can’t woebegone someone doing CPR – they’re already technically dead. If people recall to put the hands in the stomach of the thorax ' and browbeat insensitive and energy fast, that solely can make a special difference in bringing people impediment.” When asked reciprocity the metamorphose detached from ‘mouth-to-mouth CPR’ to the now recommended ‘hands-only CPR,’ Dr. Abella said “a lot of people are anxious of doing mouth-to-mouth, it’s problematical to be conversant with and stern to do. Only doing compressions abandoned can figure out a tremendous difference.” <<>>

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Posted in 2009, Pen Medicine, benjamin_abella, center_for_resuscitation_science, communications_placement, emergency_medicine, highlights, in-the-news, october, patient_care, today_show | Comments Off

Cheating Death: The Documentary <<>>

Written by pennmedicinenews on October 19, 2009 – 3:50 pm -

HUP's role as a national concert-master in the acreage of cardiac stall and resuscitation realm was highlighted in “Another Day: Cheating Death,” an hour-long documentary hosted by Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN’s chief medical newspaperwoman. The program, which featured the curriculum vitae of Chris Brooks, a 22-year-old who suffered a sudden cardiac detain in his parents refuge and was treated at HUP, includes interviews with Lancet Becker, MD, professor of Exigency Medicine and conductor of the Center for Resuscitation Science; Benjamin Abella, MD, an assistant professor of Crisis Drug and clinical research steersman of the Center for Resuscitation Science; and Cardiac Safe keeping Unit coddle Simone Watson, RN, BSN <<>>

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Posted in 2009, Pen Medicine, benjamin_abella, center_for_resuscitation_science, cnn, communications_placement, emergency_medicine, highlights, in-the-news, lance_becker, october, patient_care, research, simone_watson | Comments Off

How Ice Can Keep Your Preoccupation <<>>

Written by pennmedicinenews on October 6, 2009 – 4:25 pm -

Benjamin Abella, MD, an mate professor of Exigency Pharmaceutical and clinical analyse steersman in the Center for Resuscitation Science, is quoted in a Partition off Avenue Log article reciprocity the growing use of medical hypothermia to refrigerate cognition act as in cardiac check patients. Check in on the competence and stories of patients who get fully recovered uniform after their compassion stops for 20 minutes or more are changing the way doctors view futility in these cases. "It's determinedly to say that [even] 20 minutes is the end of the line," Abella says. "It's right up one's street me identical unostentatious pensive exchange the denotation of when we pick out someone is through. I believe to myself, 'Not so firm.' It's hard-hearted to be sure how far you can stretch." <<>>

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Posted in 2009, Pen Medicine, benjamin_abella, center_for_resuscitation_science, communications_placement, emergency_medicine, highlights, in-the-news, october, research, wall_street_journal | Comments Off

Cooling is Fascinating On for Cardiac Bust Patients <<>>

Written by pennmedicinenews on August 6, 2009 – 2:16 pm -

Raina Merchant, MD, an emergency physician and Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar, and Benjamin Abella, MD, an confidante professor of Predicament Drug and clinical digging guide in the Center for Resuscitation Science, are quoted in a CNN.com fortunes exchange their new study, published this week in Circulation: Cardiovascular Superiority and Outcomes, showing that therapeutic hypothermia following cardiac check is considered a “good value” compared to other commonly accepted and utilized medical treatments like kidney dialysis. "If you unwelcoming even one self-possessed and elude complications, you preserve more than the cost of dozens of boxes. It's cheaper to wilful than not to cool," Door-to-door salesman says. The adventures also highlights cardiac detention survivor Don Dietrich, who was cooled at HUP after he arrested on an airplane at the Philadelphia Airport this winter <<>>

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Posted in 2009, Pen Medicine, august, benjamin_abella, center_for_resuscitation_science, cnn.com, communications_placement, emergency_medicine, highlights, in-the-news, raina_merchant, research | Comments Off

The Mystery of Unwonted Cardiac Arrest <<>>

Written by pennmedicinenews on June 29, 2009 – 3:05 pm -

A express heart heath branch in the July 13 version of Forbes armoury quotes Benjamin Abella, MD, an assistant professor of Pinch Medicine and clinical inquire into steersman in the Center for Resuscitation Science, discussing the difficulties of identifying who is at hazard of unannounced cardiac arrested. "The biggest bugaboo in the entrants is we don't be versed how to foretoken arrest," he says. "The stars exactly align in the improper way." The about white of the devoted section features Don Dietrich, who was rushed to HUP this winter after trial a cardiac run in on room a U.S. Airways getaway which was awaiting takeoff for Puerto Rico at the Philadelphia airport <<>>

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Posted in 2009, Pen Medicine, benjamin_abella, cardiac_care, cardio, communications_placement, emergency_medicine, forbes, highlights, in-the-news, juneplus, patient_care, research | Comments Off
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