Shallow.
12-20 respirations per minute
Yes and no. Dehydration is usually comorbid with (occurring alongside) heat stroke. One result of dehydration is reduced urine volume so, while a patient displaying symptoms of heat stroke will likely have reduced volume, it's not from the heat stroke itself.
You can calculated reduced volume by getting the starting volume and subtracting it from the finished volume For example, If I had 890ml of water and I had 155ml left, How much has the volume reduced by. 890 - 155 = 735. So the answer would be that the water has been reduced by a total of 735ml.
Inspiration should equal to expiration;IE ratio and IT , inspiration equals tidal volume. It means that the patient is having trouble breathing.
The muscles of the chest wall & the diaphragm change the volume of the chest ... thus the volume of the lungs, which is what breathing is.
no the volume can be greatly reduced
Labored Moist Deep Shallow Difficult Stertorous (sounds like snoring)
tidal volume x breathing rate
What happens to residual volume, tidal volume, inspiratory reserve volume and expiratory reserve volume just after exercise while breathing deeply and rapidly? Do they increase, decrease or stay the same?
It will be reduced.
When the gas exits the cylinder, it will expand because of the reduced pressure. When the patient breathes in, the gas will be compressed slightly because of the increased pressure in the lungs. This pressure is required to force gases to dissolve in the bloodstream.
diaphragm