Circulation, Vol 60, 187-195, Copyright © 1979 by American Heart Association
JH Gold, JC Schuder, H Stoeckle, TA Granberg, JC Dettmer and DE Schmidt
To test the hypothesis that the effectiveness of a shock in achieving
ventricular defibrillation is relatively independent of body weight if
electrode diameter is proportional to the one-third power and current is
proportional to the two-thirds power of weight, we studied defibrillation
rates in 10 calves as they increased weight. At 50 kg, each calf was
subjected to 20 fibrillation-defibrillation episodes using 10.3-cm diameter
electrodes and 32-amp, 4-msec rectangular pulses for defibrillation. Two
days after the original study, each calf underwent 20 additional episodes
involving 44-amp pulses. With the specified scaling of electrode diameter
and pulse amplitude, the two studies were repeated at weight intervals of
25 kg as the animals grew. Six calves survived. In the study that started
with 32-amp pulses, first-shock success values of 28%, 49%, 66%, 51% and
23% were found in the six surviving calves at 50, 75, 100, 125 and 150 kg,
respectively. The corresponding values were 93%, 96%, 93%, 94% and 91% in
the study that started with 44-amp pulses. While the results of the 32-amp
study fail to support our initial hypothesis, those obtained in the 44-amp
current study appear compatible with the hypothesis.
ARTICLES
Scaling current and energy with body weight: requirements for the transthoracic ventricular defibrillation of calves as they grow from 50 to 150 kg
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