Friday, July 20, 2007

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)

CPR in basic life support. Figure A: The victim should be flat on his back and his mouth should be checked for debris. Figure B: If the victim is unconscious, open airway, lift neck, and tilt head back. Figure C: If victim is not breathing, begin artificial breathing with four quick full breaths. Figure D: Check for carotid pulse. Figure E: If pulse is absent, begin artificial circulation by depressing sternum. Figure F: Mouth-to-mouth resuscitation of an infant. ( Illustration by Electronic Illustrators Group.

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation, commonly called CPR, combines rescue breathing (one person breathing into another person) and chest compression in a lifesaving procedure performed when a person has stopped breathing or a person's heart has stopped beating.
When performed quickly enough, CPR can save lives in such emergencies as loss of consciousness, heart attacks or heart "arrests," electric shock, drowning, excessive bleeding, drug overdose, and other conditions in which there is no breathing or no pulse. The purpose of CPR is to bring oxygen to the victim's lungs and to keep blood circulating so oxygen gets to every part of the body. When a person is deprived of oxygen, permanent brain damage can begin in as little as four minutes and death can follow only minutes later.

3 comments:

astute87 said...

Hello there doc. Do u blog at IBIBO ?

DocSharma said...

Of course I blog at IBIBO.Desiguru,remember?

Unknown said...

Hope everybody knows these techniques. Mouth-to-mouth and Cardiopulmonary resuscitation are very important in rescue breathing, so if possible everybody will practice it. dermatology laser

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