Want this question answered?
No physical resuscitation by hand, mechanical, electrical, medicinal, mouth-to-mouth, cannot help if choking, unless the order of a DNR states otherwise and is specific of what cannot be included.
Once a kitten has passed away it is doubtful that it will be able to be revived. If one is it was a miracle. Depending on the reason the kitten needs to be revived depends on how to attempt to help it patting it's back or mouth to mouth can help in some cases .
Pruning a brown cedar bush may help to revive the plant, but if the plant is too damaged it will not help. Watering and fertilizing this plant may also help revive it.
they help by making popular of the Europe.
The objective is to get blood flowing to the heart. You would do compressions on the chest about 100 per minute. You would also want provide air to the victim by breathing into their mouth. Continue until victim is breathing or emergency help has arrived.
A mouth help you eat
Resuscitation may be needed in situations such as cardiac arrest, drowning, drug overdose, severe allergic reactions, choking, and electric shock. Prompt and effective resuscitation can help restore normal body functions and increase the chance of survival.
The United States wanted to help revive the economy in both places.
First, you lie the person down on a safe surface. Tilt their head back. Go through ABC ( airway-tilting the head back , Breathing-put your ear over their mouth to hear if they are breathing, Circulation- check their pulse.) If they are not breathing, skip the pulse and go straight to mouth to mouth. Check if they are breathing for two seconds, then give them two breaths. Make sure to breath in and out as you give them the breaths. Then, start CPR pumping. I can't really explain how to align your hands over the internet though, sorry. After pumping 30 times, check if they are breathing. Give them another 2 breaths and keep going until they start breathing or the ambulance arrives. :)
The atmosphere around you contains roughly 20% oxygen. When you inhale, then exhale, you trap some, but even in exhaling after a breath, you're putting out approximately 14% oxygen. While this isn't as good as 20%, it's enough for someone to survive on, and a heck of a lot better than no O2 at all.
no there is no current scientific way to revive an extinct animal.
A standard CPR or Cardio-pulmonary resuscitation helps both, the lung performance as well as the heart beat.CPR involves chest compressions-to make the heart pump blood and restore heart beat, and artificial respiration- by either exhaling into the casualty's mouth or utilizing a device that pushes air into the lungs.Though, a 'hands-only CPR' or cardio-cerebral resuscitation is a technique that involves only chest compressions, without artificial respiration, to keep blood circulating until emergency help arrives.