Answer: ↓ Down below ↓
<em>(***Please read all of it, and add if you would like***)</em>
CPR: CPR is an emergency procedure for a person whose heart has stopped or is no longer breathing. When someone's blood flow or breathing stops, seconds count. Permanent brain damage or even death can occur. If you know how to perform CPR or Cardiopulmonary resuscitation, you could save someone's life. CPR can maintain circulation, blood flow, and breathing until medical help arrives. Even if you haven't had CPR training, you can do hands-only CPR for a teen or an adult whose heart has stopped beating. Hands-only CPR is not recommended for children. Hands-only CPR uses chest compressions to keep blood circulating until medical help has arrived. If you <em>have</em> had training, you can use chest compressions, clearing the airway, and do rescue breathing. Rescue breathing helps get oxygen to the lungs for a person who has stopped breathing. To keep your skills in good form, you should repeat the training every two years which is highly recommended.
AED: An A<em>utomated External Defibrillator</em> (AED) is a medical device designed to analyze the heart rhythm and deliver an electric shock to one to restore the heart rhythm/beat back to normal. Uncoordinated heart rhythm is called Ventricular fibrillation. It's often responsible for sudden cardiac arrest, or sudden heartbeat stopping. Sudden cardiac arrests occur when ventricular fibrillation takes place or when the heart stops beating altogether. Without medical attention, the victim may collapse, lose consciousness, becomes unresponsive, and die. Many victims of cardiac arrest have no history of heart disease and are stricken without a warning. Chances of survival from sudden cardiac death diminish by 7 to 10% for each minute without immediate CPR. After 10 minutes, resuscitation rarely succeeds, and the patient or victim... dies.
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Hope I helped!!!
GL :)
Answer:
3) 30-40 beats per minute.
Explanation:
It's usually 30-40.
Answer:
D) virus is the correct answer
Explanation:
Answer:
The answers are letters B and C.
Explanation:
<em>The differences between Braxton Hicks contractions and true labor are:</em>
<em>1. The braxton hicks contractions do not follow a consisten pattern, while the real contractions last around 30 to 70 seconds and repeat the same intervals.</em>
<em>2. Increasing frequency: The true labor happens after the increase of the real contractions frequency, meanwhile the braxton hicks don't increase in frequency.</em>
<em>3. Intensity: the real contractions are way more painful than the braxton hicks. The braxton hicks contractions are not painfully mostly.</em>
<em>4. Location of discomfort: the true labor causes back pain, lower back pain that can spread to the legs. Braxton-hicks only causes abdominal pain, in the front. In addition, changing positions and movement can stop the braxton hicks contraction. In a true labor, movement do not stop the real contractions.</em>
Declining nutrient stores abnormal functions within the body and overt signs.