How low a pH can the human body handle? How bad is acidosis in cardiac arrest? Is there any point attempting to resuscitate a cardiac arrest patient with a pH of 6.8?

How low a pH can the human body handle? How bad is acidosis in cardiac arrest? Is there any point attempting to resuscitate a cardiac arrest patient with a pH of 6.8?


In this lecture from #SWEETs17, Jonathan Ilicki presents a poem covering cardiac arrest physiology, acidosis and the extreme boundaries of the human body. Discover what acidosis does to the human body and how low we can go!


UPDATE

Chris Turner contacted us in the comments to let us know about what seems to be the world record in extreme acidosis (pH 6,27) in survived cardiac arrest. Unfortunately, that case wasn’t identified prior to the lecture and was therefore not included. The case lives here.


And in the words of Chris himself: “There may be more…”


Video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-5LG53cV9E

Podcast


Slides

Slides as pdf


About Jonathan

Emergency Medicine Resident, Clinical Innovation Fellow. EM resident at Karolinska, Stockholm. Special interest in arrestology and EBM. Find him on linkedin. Email: j dot ilicki at gmail.
More content on his youtube channel
He promises to be on twitter soon…

Credits

Swedish Emergency Talks 2017 (www.sweets.nu/en)
Johan Smedbäck (recording), Therese Djärv & Susanne Rysz (peer review)
Music: Decktonic (http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Decktonic)

More from SWEETs17

Stay tuned for more talks from SWEETs17 here on scanFOAM. Also, make sure to follow the SWEETs team on twitter.


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