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Factors Associated With Sudden Death of Individuals Requiring Restraint for Excited Delirium

NCJ Number
238233
Journal
American Journal of Emergency Medicine Volume: 19 Issue: 3 Dated: May 2001 Pages: 187-191
Author(s)
Samuel J. Stratton, M.D., M.P.H.; Christopher Rogers, M.D.; Karen Brickett, R.N., M.S.N.; Ginger Gruzinski, R.N., B.S.N.
Date Published
May 2001
Length
5 pages
Annotation
The purpose of this article is to identify and rank factors associated with sudden death of individuals requiring restraint for excited delirium.
Abstract
Eighteen cases of such deaths witnessed by emergency medical service (EMS) personnel are reported. The 18 cases reported were restrained with the wrists and ankles bound and attached behind the back. This restraint technique was also used for all 196 surviving excited delirium victims encountered during the study period. Unique to these data is a description of the initial cardiopulmonary arrest rhythm in 72 percent of the sudden death cases. Associated with all sudden death cases was struggle by the victim with forced restraint and cessation of struggling with labored or agonal breathing immediately before cardiopulmonary arrest. Also associate was stimulant drug use (78 percent), chronic disease (56 percent), and obesity (56 percent). The primary cardiac arrest rhythm of ventricular tachycardia was found in 1 of 13 victims with confirmed initial cardiac rhythms, with none found in ventricular fibrillation. The findings indicate that unexpected sudden death when excited delirium victims are restrained in the out-of-hospital setting is not infrequent and can be associated with multiple predictable but usually uncontrollable factors. (Published Abstract)