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  Vol. 118 No. 5, November 1966 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Resuscitation and Cardiac Pacing.

Edited by Gavin Shaw, BSc, FRCP, MRCP; George Smith, MD, ChM, FRCS, FACS; and Thomas J. Thomson, MD, ChB, FRFPS, MRCP. Price, $6. Pp 256, with 59 illustrations. F. A. Davis Company, 1914 Cherry St, Philadelphia, Pa, 1965.

Jeremiah A. Barondess, MD, Reviewer

Arch Intern Med. 1966;118(5):511.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

The past several years have witnessed the development of an aggressive new attitude in therapeutic attacks on severe heart disease and particularly on some of the acute lifethreatening events which may appear in the course of such conditions as acute myocardial infarction and complete heart block. As recently as ten years ago, the acute cessation of effective cardiac activity was almost always an irrevocable event, and blows on the chest and intracardiac injections of epinephrine, while often resorted to, were virtually never successful in restoring an effective circulation. Such acute catastrophes are now referred to collectively as instances of "cardiac arrest," and, as Smith1 has pointed out, the term is apt, implying as it does that the state of cessation of an effective heart beat is transient or remediable and promoting the thought of prompt counteraction.

Experience with modern techniques indicates that, depending on the circumstances of the arrest, survival . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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