Los Angeles Times

Drones to the rescue?

The fastest way to get help to people in cardiac arrest could be on a drone.

- KAREN KAPLAN karen.kaplan@latimes.com

The best medicine for a person going into sudden cardiac arrest is an electric shock. That jolt temporaril­y stops the heart’s rapid or erratic beat. When the heart starts itself up again, it can revert to its normal rhythm and resume pumping blood to the brain and the rest of the body.

The sooner this happens, the better. When a patient is shocked within one minute of collapse, the chance of survival is nearly 90%. But if it takes 10 minutes to administer a shock, the odds of survival fall below 5%.

If a victim is lucky, he or she will collapse in a mall, airport, school or other public venue that’s outfitted with an automated external defibrilla­tor, or AED. These user-friendly machines can assess the cause of cardiac arrest, determine whether a shock is appropriat­e and deliver it if necessary.

But if a victim is unlucky, he or she will have to wait for an AED to come. Usually, this means calling for an ambulance. But in the nottoo-distant future, the ambulance could be replaced by a flying drone.

If that sounds ridiculous­ly futuristic, head over to the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm. That’s where a team of doctors and nurses built a bright yellow drone capable of delivering an AED to a patient in need.

The drone in question weighs about 12.5 pounds and uses eight rotors to achieve speeds of up to 47 mph.

Once a pilot programs its route and destinatio­n, the drone uses a GPS system, autopilot software and a high-definition camera to get there.

Fluorescen­t paint and LED lights help make it easy for people to find.

Members of the research team had previously used geographic informatio­n system data to determine whether there would be any advantage to putting AEDs on drones.

Their models suggested that a drone would arrive faster than an ambulance 93% of the time, saving patients an average of 19 minutes.

Now they’ve gone a step further and dispatched an actual drone from a fire station about 45 minutes north of Stockholm to 18 locations where people

Swedish researcher­s’ models suggested that a drone carrying a defibrilla­tor could arrive faster than an ambulance 93% of the time, saving victims of cardiac arrest precious minutes.

suffered actual cardiac arrests away from a hospital between 2006 and 2014. The times for the test flights were compared with the ambulance times recorded in the Swedish Registry for Cardiopulm­onary Resuscitat­ion.

As predicted, the drones beat the ambulances handily, according to a report Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Assn. In all 18 cases, the drone arrived more quickly than the ambulance.

The time it took to get the drone dispatched, launched and to the site of a cardiac arrest ranged from a low of 1 minute, 15 seconds to a high of 11 minutes, 51 seconds. Ambulances had taken between 5 minutes and 38 minutes to respond to calls at the same locations.

For the drones, the median time from dispatch to arrival was 5 minutes, 21 seconds. For ambulances, it was 22 minutes. Thus, the median amount of time saved by drones was 16 minutes, 39 seconds.

“Saving 16 minutes is likely to be clinically important,” the study’s authors wrote.

To be fair, the drones may have had an exaggerate­d advantage, given that all test flights occurred on days with good weather. Also, road conditions may have improved since the ambulances made their runs, sometimes more than a decade ago. If so, the advantage of the drones might not be as great as it initially appears.

Still, the results are good enough for researcher­s to continue with further flight tests and to see if it would be feasible for drones to be included in the emergency medical services system, the study’s authors wrote.

The American Heart Assn. estimates that in 2016, more than 350,000 people in the U.S. went into cardiac arrest away from a hospital; only 12% of them survived long enough to be treated in a hospital and released. With so much room for improvemen­t, drones have the potential to make a real difference.

 ?? Andreas Claesson ?? THIS medical drone can deliver an automated external defibrilla­tor to a patient who has suffered sudden cardiac arrest. In tests, the drone arrived a median of more than 16 minutes faster than an ambulance had.
Andreas Claesson THIS medical drone can deliver an automated external defibrilla­tor to a patient who has suffered sudden cardiac arrest. In tests, the drone arrived a median of more than 16 minutes faster than an ambulance had.

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