Management of Hanging Survivors
All hanging survivors require immediate aggressive resuscitation with standard BLS/ACLS protocols, prioritizing airway management and oxygenation over cervical spine precautions, as cervical spine injury is exceedingly rare in non-judicial hangings and cerebral hypoxia is the primary cause of death. 1, 2
Scene Safety and Initial Response
- Ensure your own safety before approaching the victim, as scene hazards may still be present 3, 1
- Cut down or remove the victim from the hanging position immediately using the fastest means available 1
- Do NOT routinely perform cervical spine immobilization unless there are specific indicators of traumatic injury—cervical spine fractures occur in less than 1% of non-judicial hanging cases and delays in airway management increase mortality 1, 2, 4
- Activate emergency medical services immediately if not already done 3
Airway Management (Priority #1)
Airway compromise from cerebral hypoxia is the primary threat to survival, not spinal injury. 2
- Check responsiveness by tapping shoulders and shouting "Are you all right?" 1
- Open the airway using head tilt-chin lift maneuver (place hand on forehead, tilt head back, lift chin with fingertips) 3, 1
- Remove any visible obstructions from the mouth, including dislodged dentures 1
- Do NOT use abdominal thrusts or Heimlich maneuver—these are not indicated for hanging victims and can cause injury, vomiting, and aspiration 1
Breathing Assessment
- Look, listen, and feel for breathing for 10 seconds: observe chest movements, listen for breath sounds at the mouth, feel for air on your cheek 1
- Treat occasional gasps as absent breathing—gasps do not provide adequate ventilation 1
- If no breathing or only gasping: give 2 effective rescue breaths (1.5-2 seconds each, making chest rise and fall) 1
Circulation Assessment
- Check for signs of circulation: look for any movement, swallowing, or breathing; palpate carotid pulse 1
- Take no more than 10 seconds to check for pulse—if not definitely felt, start chest compressions immediately 1, 5
- Victims without spontaneous cardiac output at scene have zero survival even with successful initial CPR 4
CPR Protocol (If No Pulse)
- Begin chest compressions immediately at rate of 100-120 per minute 5
- Compress at least 5 cm (2 inches) deep 1, 5
- Perform cycles of 30 compressions to 2 breaths 5
- Minimize interruptions in compressions 5
- Change compressors every 2 minutes to maintain quality 5
If Breathing But Unconscious
- Place in recovery position to maintain airway patency 3
- Monitor peripheral circulation if using recovery position 3
- Provide supplemental oxygen to maintain saturation >94% 3
Hospital Management
- Intubate patients presenting with gasping or poor clinical status immediately, regardless of initial GCS 6
- Provide assisted ventilation and intensive care monitoring 6
- Glasgow Coma Score at scene or on hospital arrival is the strongest prognostic indicator 4
- Monitor for delayed complications including aspiration pneumonia 6
- Aggressive treatment should be initiated regardless of dismal initial presentation—88% survival rate with only 5% poor neurological outcomes in transported patients 6, 4
Psychiatric Evaluation
- Assess for mood disorders, anxiety disorders, or substance abuse once medically stable 3
- Note that 70% of hanging victims have concurrent drug and/or alcohol ingestion 4
Critical Pitfalls to Avoid
- Do NOT delay airway management for cervical spine imaging or immobilization unless obvious traumatic indicators are present 1, 2
- Do NOT mistake gasps for adequate breathing 1
- Do NOT spend more than 10 seconds checking pulse before initiating compressions 1, 5
- Do NOT withhold aggressive resuscitation based on poor initial presentation—severe neurologic deficits are often reversible 6, 7
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