The recommended dose for patients with cardiac arrest is 300 mg given intravenously as a bolus. |
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Then I was introduced to the surgeon who, suitably gowned and gloved, was there in case of cardiac arrest. |
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Technology that could save thousands of cardiac arrest victims is being developed by the latest spin-out company from Napier University. |
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Consider that, for decades, clinicians used local standards for resuscitating patients in cardiac arrest. |
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In cardiac arrest, the heart stops beating effectively, blood does not circulate and no pulse can be felt. |
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Because cases of ventricular arrhythmia and cardiac arrest may go undiagnosed, we also examined deaths from all causes. |
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The dial on your dive watch would send a Geiger counter into cardiac arrest. |
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As Mrs. Holland has not suffered a cardiac arrest, this evidence has no direct bearing on the issues that were before the Board. |
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Three quarters of all deaths from myocardial infarction occur after cardiac arrest in the community. |
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Somebody who has collapsed as a result of a cardiac arrest needs immediate attention. |
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If a high serum magnesium concentration has contributed to the cardiac arrest, consider giving calcium chloride. |
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Hypothermia may render the carotid pulse impalpable, but it is important not to start chest compression without evidence of cardiac arrest. |
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Several cardiovascular problems may be caused by electrical injury, including vessel rupture, cardiac arrest and cardiac arrhythmias. |
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A second cardiac arrest that began with asystole was followed by ventricular fibrillation. |
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He had a cardiac arrest after speaking at a rally for the gypsy and traveler community in Basildon, Essex. |
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Healthcare professionals will continue to be taught to check the carotid pulse to confirm cardiac arrest. |
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What happens in cardiac arrest is that the heart is fluttering rather than pumping blood, says Anne Marie. |
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She suffered multi-organ failure, including a cardiac arrest which stopped her heart for four minutes. |
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Patients with cardiac arrest most often present with ventricular fibrillation. |
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He collapsed but was revived by staff and was transferred to Leeds General Infirmary where he suffered another cardiac arrest and died. |
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The operator has only to recognise that cardiac arrest may have occurred and attach two adhesive electrodes to the patient's chest. |
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The little rental car jumps along jerkily as Dad tries to shift gears without giving himself a cardiac arrest. |
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Large chronic doses of licorice may result in cardiac arrhythmias, cardiac arrest, and pseudoprimary aldosteronism. |
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A 33 year old man died six months after he had had a cardiac arrest during surgery for a retinal detachment. |
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What's the first thing to do when you witness someone collapse from cardiac arrest? |
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Unfortunately, about a day after her admission she had an electromechanical dissociation cardiac arrest and died. |
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However, syncope, aborted cardiac arrest, and sudden death do continue to occur. |
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It was determined that the patient had suffered severe anoxic brain damage as a result of the cardiac arrest. |
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The potential result is a dead passenger if he or she goes into complete cardiac arrest during the motor burn of up to several minutes. |
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These are used to help crew members to resuscitate passengers in the event of sudden cardiac arrest during a flight. |
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By 8pm that night she was moved back to the intensive care unit but her recovery was set back the following day when she had a cardiac arrest. |
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Every day about 16 people die from sudden cardiac arrest, which often happens without warning. |
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Time is an essential factor in treating patients experiencing a cardiac arrest. |
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Heart attacks, which are caused by a blockage of a coronary artery, can lead to cardiac arrest. |
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Survival from cardiac arrest can be increased sixfold by providing first line responders with defibrillators. |
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Imagine looking desperately for adrenaline while treating a patient with a cardiac arrest, finding an ampoule labelled ephedrine, and mistaking it for epinephrine. |
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After cardiac arrest, non-pregnant adults suffer irreversible brain damage from anoxia within three to four minutes, but pregnant women become hypoxic more quickly. |
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Because of the rich nerve supply to the head, neck and face, any surgery, no matter how small and routine, carries an inherent risk of cardiac arrest. |
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A woman, sixty-eight, suffers a heart attack and goes into prolonged cardiac arrest. |
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Larger doses of fluoride can cause life-threatening hypocalcemia with convulsions, tetany, decreased myocardial contractility, ventricular arrhythmias, and cardiac arrest. |
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Nowadays, resuscitation after cardiac arrest is commonplace, although long-term survival and return to a useful life is unusual. |
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Not even a daily reshuffling of his belief system that would give a less optimistic man cardiac arrest. |
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The chances of survival for a victim of cardiac arrest are much higher when the chain of survival is set in place as soon as possible. |
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While working on a cardiac arrest patient just last week, my colleagues and I managed to get a pulse back. |
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Four suffered lasting neurological damage from their injuries and one patient died at the scene from cardiac arrest. |
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Episodes of sweating, sudden pallor, hypothermia, and cardiac arrest and failure also occur. |
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Symptoms can range from muscle tremors to cardiac arrhythmia, and even cardiac arrest. |
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But there are reports which say cannabis can be considered as a cause of death because it can induce a cardiac arrest. |
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Now he is in critical condition, facing the risk of a coma and cardiac arrest that could end his life. |
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Should they use this or that medication in the early stages of cardiac arrest? |
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He notes that the increased myocardial oxygen consumption occurring with epinephrine may have harmful effects in patients with asystolic cardiac arrest. |
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In severe overdosage, particularly following intravenous injection, apnea, circulatory collapse, cardiac arrest and death may occur. |
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Patients treated with some antipsychotic medications have been shown to be at increased risk for ventricular arrhythmias, cardiac arrest, and sudden death. |
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This new type of device can also emit an electric shock to correct a dangerously abnormal heart rate and revive a patient in cardiac arrest. |
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However, it can cause severe cardiac dysrhythmias, including cardiac arrest, so you should always start electrocardiographic monitoring when giving it. |
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We compared the frequency of cardiac arrest and ventricular arrhythmia associated with different antipsychotic drugs, in particular comparing thioridazine to haloperidol. |
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Persons who have a cardiac arrest in a private residence are also less likely than persons who have an arrest in a public location to receive cardiopulmonary resuscitation. |
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The three soon became ill and were taken to a nearby clinic, where Long went into cardiac arrest and died. |
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Maybe the one who failed to call 911 for at least 20 minutes after Michael went into cardiac arrest. |
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Of the three adults who received amphotericin B in addition to stopping the lipid alimentation, one had persistent fungemia and died of a cardiac arrest. |
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The installation of defibrillators in arenas and Service de sécurité incendie emergency vehicles gives victims of sudden cardiac arrest swifter access to defibrillation. |
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Even in ice cold water, it will be approximately one hour before they would become unconscious from hypothermia and about one additional hour before they would die due to cardiac arrest because of the cold. |
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The unit automatically activates when opened and if the signs of sudden cardiac arrest are present, the AED will advise the first responder and talk him or her through steps to defibrillate. |
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The FP anesthetist must be skilled in acute resuscitation of patients with airway obstruction, cardiac arrest, multiple trauma, shock of any origin, burns, and other medical emergencies and in neonatal resuscitation. |
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Cases of cardiac arrest, ventricular fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia, ECG QT prolonged, sudden death and syncope were reported rarely in post-marketing experience. |
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Each ambulance is equipped for cardiopulmonary resuscitation, an emergency medical procedure for a victim of cardiac arrest, with a ventilator and a technician who works to ensure that the patient reaches the hospital safely. |
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Rapid intravenous injection of calcium salts may cause vasodilation, decreased blood pressure, bradycardia, cardiac arrhythmias, syncope and cardiac arrest. |
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The exact cause of death is unknown, but cardiac arrest following an unexpected development of a severe acute asthmatic crisis and subsequent hypoxia is suspected. |
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For pacemaker users, prolonged exposure to MRI causes the appearance of burns on the heart's muscle by increasing its local temperature and an irregular heartbeat, which can result in cardiac arrest. |
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He could have suffered sudden cardiac arrest. |
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Improvement or rigorous challenge of the methodology is complicated by the difficulty in obtaining approval to undertake studies in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest victims. |
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Identification was made possible by body marks, X-ray and dental records. The cause of death had been immediate brain injury resulting in cardiac arrest. |
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Shortly after he was able to free himself from the pleasure craft, he suffered cardiac arrest and subsequently died while in the care of EHS personnel while en route to the hospital. |
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High blood pressure is not an illness in itself. However, it greatly increases the risk of heart and vascular diseases such as a strokes or cardiac arrest. |
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Cardiac arrest is not a heart attack, but heart attack or pulmonary embolism is the underlying cause of cardiac arrest in perhaps two-third of patients. |
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The first phase of the study found that, for cardiac arrest, bystanders and emergency personnel doing CPR on the patient were independently associated with survival. |
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A severe electric shock may cause cardiac arrest. |
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Their hypothesis: Patients were being identified prior to cardiac arrest and either never coded at all or were moved to the ICU prior to their arrest. |
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We hope that tenecteplase will be able to restore blood circulation throughout the brain and give the revived cardiac arrest patient a better chance for normal neurological functioning. |
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Administration of suxamethonium may lead to severe bradycardia and even to cardiac arrest in a hypoxic patient. |
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She had a witnessed cardiac arrest with ventricular tachycardia that responded to a precordial thump. |
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Two years later he returned to the same heart unit for a Fontan procedure to improve his heart after which he suffered a fatal cardiac arrest. |
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Cardiac arrest is an emergency and if you find someone in cardiac arrest you should call 999 immediately. |
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The simple machines can be used by anyone to shock cardiac arrest victims back to life. |
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By that time she was going into cardiac arrest and struggling to breathe due to a bowel infection caused by gall stones. |
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I understand how important it is to defibrillate a person in cardiac arrest as quickly as possible to give them the best chance of survival. |
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Potassium chloride causes cardiac arrest and death after loss of consciousness. |
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Continuous chest compressions was an ongoing emphasis, with the precordial thump now advised only to be undertaken with monitored in-hospital cardiac arrest. |
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Kingsley, left, 29, suffered a cardiac arrest after being restrained for a prolonged period of time with a towel over his head at the Oleaster Health Unit in Birmingham. |
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In 1990, while allegedly on a diet of 10 to 15 glasses of iced tea a day and little additional intake, Schiavo suffered cardiac arrest that caused irreversible brain damage. |
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At the end of November 2008, the child suffered from cardiac arrest with severe brain damage and was subsequently in a persistent vegetative state with his body paralysed. |
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Each year an estimated 270 sudden cardiac arrest deaths occur in British schools, according to Sads UK, the Sudden Arrhythmic Death Syndrome charity. |
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Symptoms of yew poisoning include an accelerated heart rate, muscle tremors, convulsions, collapse, difficulty breathing, circulation impairment and eventually cardiac arrest. |
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Because biochemical processes can confuse and substitute caesium with potassium, excess caesium can lead to hypokalemia, arrythmia, and acute cardiac arrest. |
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They noted that postrenal acute renal failure can lead to acute pulmonary edema as a result of fluid retention and cardiac arrest from hyperkalemia. |
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Reintubation, when necessary, may be associated with complications, including upper airway trauma, alterations in blood pressure, dysrhythmia and cardiac arrest. |
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We hypothesised that a threshold value of AMSA could be identified as an indicator of successful defibrillation in human victims of cardiac arrest. |
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