I'm not sure, probably between 250 and 1 000 micrograms per liter, depending on the supplier.
epinephrine into the thigh muscles antihistamine iv fluied
Epinephrine CANNOT be given IV push--unless you want to put your patient into severe tachycardia and risk of cardiac arrest! That's why Epi pens are injected into the thigh. Hospital use can use alternate delivery methods, but not IV push.
Epinephrine is not given during CPR by the layperson. Paramedics might push epinepherine via IV among other meds during CPR. CPR is not interrupted to push these drugs.
The usual IV dose of Vancomycin for a three year old is 40 milligrams per kilogram per day in 3 or 4 doses. For a 23 kilogram child, the daily dose would be 920mg. Divided into 4 doses this is a dose of 230 mg every 6 hours, so 345 mg could be too much.
Yes, he can be revived with CPR, intubation, IV ,emergency drugs like epinephrine and atropine and dopamine to increase heart rate and perfusion.
I, II, and III I. It is the rate-limiting enzyme of glycogenolysis II. It breaks alpha 1,4 glycosidic bonds III. It is activated by epinephrine
required chemical analysis results as per 1875 class iv
Drugs, such as epinephrine, atropine, naloxone, and lidocaine can be given via the endotracheal route if IV access has not been obtained yet. The dose for epinephrine, rather than 1mg IV, should be 5mg endotracheally, followed by 5 to 10 mL of saline and several rapid breaths to aerosolize it into the lungs. ACLS currently recommends this approach, but there have been no studies showing benefit to this route of administration. I would recommend rapid IV access, and if no IV access if available within 90 seconds, placement if an intraosseous line should be attempted immediately afterwards and all medications given through that line. That is standard practice at many hospitals in this area as well as many EMS services.
The Canon 5D Mark IV has a battery life of approximately 900 shots per charge.
1200
For an IV rate of 100 ml per hour, you would set the IV pump to deliver 1.67 ml per minute (100 ml divided by 60 minutes). If you are using a standard IV administration set with a drip factor of 10 drops per ml, this would equal 16.7 drops per minute (1.67 ml multiplied by 10 drops). You would typically round this to the nearest whole number, so in this case, it would be 17 drops per minute.
150ml per hour