The answer to this question is "immerse in cold water". What the responder or the person injured must do upon encountering or experiencing a first-degree or second-degree burns with closed blisters is to immerse the affected surface in a cold water. This will avoid further damage to the skin cells and tissues.
Ok yes thats true. THe muscle breaks down and when it is rebuilt with amino acids and what not the protein comes back in bigger clumps and as a product you become "stronger"
If there is resistance to the BVM when ventilating a tracheostomy patient the EMT should check air is escaping through a hole in the lung and filling the pleural space.
<h3>What is tracheostomy?</h3>
A tracheostomy is a hole made in the front of the neck to allow a tube to be inserted into the windpipe trachea to assist breathing.
The tube can be connected to an oxygen supply and a breathing machine called a ventilator if necessary.
Individuals notice increased resistance to ventilations while ventilating an intubated patient with a bag-valve-mask-unit. This could mean that air is escaping from the lung and filling the pleural space.
Thus, the EMT should check for this.
For more details regarding tracheostomy, visit:
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It is either the first one or the third one.
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