Reference terms from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is an emergency procedure that combines chest compressions often with artificial ventilation in an effort to manually preserve intact brain function until further measures are taken to restore spontaneous blood circulation and breathing in a person who is in cardiac arrest. It is recommended in those who are unresponsive with no breathing or abnormal breathing, for example, agonal respirations.

CPR involves chest compressions for adults between 5 cm (2.0 in) and 6 cm (2.4 in) deep and at a rate of at least 100 to 120 per minute. The rescuer may also provide artificial ventilation by either exhaling air into the subject's mouth or nose (mouth-to-mouth resuscitation) or using a device that pushes air into the subject's lungs (mechanical ventilation). Current recommendations place emphasis on early and high-quality chest compressions over artificial ventilation; a simplified CPR method involving only chest compressions is recommended for untrained rescuers. In children, however, only doing compressions may result in worse outcomes because, in children, the problem normally arises from a respiratory, rather than cardiac, problems. Chest compression to breathing ratios is set at 30 to 2 in adults.

CPR alone is unlikely to restart the heart. Its main purpose is to restore partial flow of oxygenated blood to the brain and heart. The objective is to delay tissue death and to extend the brief window of opportunity for a successful resuscitation without permanent brain damage. Administration of an electric shock to the subject's heart, termed defibrillation, is usually needed in order to restore a viable, or "perfusing", heart rhythm. Defibrillation is effective only for certain heart rhythms, namely ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia, rather than asystole or pulseless electrical activity. Early shock, when appropriate, is recommended. CPR may succeed in inducing a heart rhythm that may be shockable. In general, CPR is continued until the person has a return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) or is declared dead.

 
Note:   The above text is excerpted from the Wikipedia article Cardiopulmonary resuscitation, which has been released under the GNU Free Documentation License.
 

Check out these latest Nanowerk News:

 

New strategy obtains carbon nanotube fibers with higher dynamic strength

Scienists have developed a strategy to fabricate carbon nanotube fibers with the dynamic strength up to 14 GPa.

Next-generation memory materials with atom-level control

Researchers achieved highly efficient field-free spin-orbit torque magnetization switching through atom-level control of composite oxides.

Advances in the study of the structure that is formed around gold nanoparticles

Scientists have come up with a promising method for understanding the role of surface molecules in the formation of nanoparticles.

How scientists build rotatory machines with molecules

Researchers developed zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs) mimicking intricate machines, enabling precise control over nanoscale mechanical movements and advancing nanotechnology.

Fundamental spatial limits of all-optical magnetization switching

Magnetization can be switched with a single laser pulse, but its scalability to the nanometer scale is unknown. Researchers have found the spatial limit for light-driven magnetization reversal.

Microrobot-packed pill shows promise for treating inflammatory bowel disease in mice

Engineers developed a pill that releases microrobots into the colon to treat IBD. In mice, it reduced symptoms and healed tissue without toxic side effects.

Revealing the dynamic choreography inside multilayer vesicles

Scientists revealed how vesicles self-assemble within cell membranes, aiding the design of bio-inspired vesicles for drug delivery and life-like synthetic materials.

Understanding why carbon nanotube bundles become mechanically weak when twisted

Molecular dynamics simulations shed light on a critical limitation of carbon nanotube yarns, paving the way for possible solutions.

Innovative electrospinning techniques revolutionize precise medicine through advanced medical devices

Researchers developed innovative electrospinning techniques enhancing medical devices, promising to revolutionize nano/microrobots, wearable/implantable biosensors, and organ-on-chip systems.

A chip-scale titanium-sapphire laser

The prototype is four orders of magnitude smaller (10,000x) and three orders less expensive (1,000x) than any Ti:sapphire laser ever produced.