Clinical Trial: Recognizing Ventricular Fibrillation From an Area of a Mobile Phone

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Observational

Official Title: Recognizing Ventricular Fibrillation From an Area of a Mobile Phone

Brief Summary:

Recognition of out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) during an emergency call is based on standardized questions concerning the symptoms of OHCA. With this method cardiac arrest is recognized in 50-83% of cases. When the emergency medical dispatcher identifies cardiac arrest during the emergency call the survival of the patient improves. Accurate emergency medical service response is activated promptly and bystander will receive cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) instructions. It has been estimated that proper implementation of CPR instructions will save thousands of lives each year.

If the ECG could be recorded by the mobile phone, transmitted during the emergency call to the dispatch centre and analysed there with the software of a semi-automated external defibrillator(AED), the recognition of cardiac arrest could be more accurate.

The aim of this study is to examine, if AED, with minimal size electrodes within an area of a mobile phone, is able to recognize reliably ventricular fibrillation (VF), the rhythm with the best prognosis in OHCA.


Detailed Summary: Dysrhythmia patients who need an implantable cardioverter defibrillator(ICD) or patients with an already implanted ICD which function needs to be revised will be recruited into this study. Our hypothesis is that the ECG and VF is recordable in 100% of cases with a semi-automatic defibrillator. In sample size calculations we compared this 100% recognition to the present situation with 80% recognition of cardiac arrest in emergency medical communication centre during emergency call. According to the power calculation of 1-sided binomial test with risk level 0.05 and power of 95 %, 22 observations is needed to detect difference between expected full successes (99 %) from the previous 80 % of successes in recognition.
Sponsor: North Karelia Central Hospital

Current Primary Outcome: The ability of AED to recognise induced VF [ Time Frame: 24 hours ]

The ability of AED to correctly recognise ventricular fibrillation from a bipolar ECG recorded within an area of mobile phone: is the recognition good enough to automatically divide the rhythm correctly into categories of shockable and non-shockable?


Original Primary Outcome: Same as current

Current Secondary Outcome: Quality of VF [ Time Frame: 24 hour ]

The recorded rhythms will be analysed, beside an AED, by two experienced cardiologists and categorised as shockable or non-shockable. The cardiologists also will assess the quality of the recordings and grade each recording according to three categories of quality: 1, bad; 2, average; 3, good.


Original Secondary Outcome:

Information By: North Karelia Central Hospital

Dates:
Date Received: March 27, 2013
Date Started: November 2013
Date Completion:
Last Updated: March 22, 2016
Last Verified: March 2016