Published Sep 29, 2017
CRB3360
3 Posts
Hi everyone,
When is it considered one full round during a code? At what point does the one round end? And at what point does the second round begin during a cardiac arrest?
Thank you.
BeckyESRN
1,263 Posts
A round of drinks comes after the code! Not really sure what you're asking. I've been involved with lots of code and never have I heard anything referred to as round one/round two
BBP42
107 Posts
One 'cycle' of CPR is one round of 30 chest compressions and 2 rescue breaths. I always assumed round two starts with the next set of compressions.
For example, when someone says "we coded the patient eight rounds". I wasn't sure what one round meant? Is one round considered one cycle of cpr? Thanks again.
chare
4,324 Posts
A round of CPR would be 4 cycles of 30 compressions/2 ventilations, or about 2 minutes. A round of epinephrine eould be one dose, or 3 to 5 minutes.
You could apply this to pulse checks, other medications, etc.
Thank you!
Ben_Dover
254 Posts
A round of CPR would be 4 cycles of 30 compressions/2 ventilations, or about 2 minutes. A round of epinephrine eould be one dose, or 3 to 5 minutes.You could apply this to pulse checks, other medications, etc.
I thought it was 5 cycles? No?!
Oops! Don't know what I was thinking.
Lennonninja, MSN, APRN, NP
1,004 Posts
I've heard it used with "when was our last round of epi?" so that we know when we can give the next one.
SouthpawRN
337 Posts
I have seen it used as each reapeat of Epi completes a round. That is the most repeated drug, others like atropine, lidocaine etc get given in between the epi but start to vary more the longer the code goes on !
Julius Seizure
1 Article; 2,282 Posts
If someone said "we coded them for eight rounds", I would assume they got eight doses of epi at 3-5 minute intervals (along with everything else that happens in those 3-5 minute "rounds". Epi dosing kind of sets the rhythm of a code, in my mind.
JKL33
6,952 Posts
That's how I hear it used too - - "we've done 4 rounds of epi..."
I've never heard anyone use "rounds" in terms of cycles of compressions/ventilations.