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  2. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiopulmonary_resuscitation

    [31]: 8 Recommended compression depth in adults and children is of 5 cm (2 inches), and in infants it is 4 cm (1.6 inches). [ 31 ] : 8 In adults, rescuers should use two hands for the chest compressions (one on the top of the other), while in children one hand could be enough (or two, adapting the compressions to the child's constitution), and ...

  3. AutoPulse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AutoPulse

    The compression depth and force varies per patient. The chest displacement equals a 20% reduction in the anterior-posterior chest depth. The physiological duty cycle is 50%, and it runs in a 30:2, 15:2 or continuous compression mode, which is user-selectable, at a rate of 80 compressions-per-minute.

  4. Lung volumes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lung_volumes

    The average total lung capacity of an adult human male is about 6 litres of air. [1] Tidal breathing is normal, resting breathing; the tidal volume is the volume of air that is inhaled or exhaled in only a single such breath. The average human respiratory rate is 30–60 breaths per minute at birth, [2] decreasing to 12–20 breaths per minute ...

  5. Cardiac arrest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiac_arrest

    After defibrillation, chest compressions should be continued for two minutes before another rhythm check. [30] This is based on a compression rate of 100-120 compressions per minute, a compression depth of 5–6 centimeters into the chest, full chest recoil, and a ventilation rate of 10 breath ventilations per minute. [30]

  6. Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extracorporeal...

    Chest compressions were commenced within 10 minutes; The cardiac arrest duration (collapse to arrival at E&TC [ambiguous]) has been < 60 minutes; The patient is aged between 12 and 70 years; There are no major co-morbidities that would preclude return to independent living; The patient is profoundly hypothermic (<32 °C) due to accidental exposure

  7. LUCAS device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LUCAS_device

    The LUCAS can be used both in and out of the hospital setting. [6] [7] The 2015 European Resuscitation Council Guidelines for Resuscitation does not recommend using mechanical chest compression on a routine basis, but are good alternative for situations where it may be difficult or to maintain continuous high-quality compressions, or when it may be too strenuous on the medic to do so. [8]

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  9. Work of breathing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Work_of_breathing

    The normal relaxed state of the lung and chest is partially empty. Further exhalation requires muscular work. Inhalation is an active process requiring work. [4] Some of this work is to overcome frictional resistance to flow, and part is used to deform elastic tissues, and is stored as potential energy, which is recovered during the passive process of exhalation, Tidal breathing is breathing ...