sucking chest wound
Sucking Chest Wound
Torn diaphragm
Chest movement with the lungs inflating/deflating. Breath passing through the mouth or nose
Exposing the chest gives you several advantages:It can reveal hidden injuries that you otherwise would have missedIt facilitates attachment of the AED padsExposing the chest makes it easier to find your hand position for compressionsIt makes it easier to monitor equal rise and fall of the chest during rescue breaths.
It does not rise or fall. It is an imaginary line.
Fall is the height of a slanted or diagonal straight surface. Gradient is the result of rise divided by fall (rise/fall) (rise over fall)
LLF: Look, Listen & Feel:Look for the rise and fall of the chest,Listen for sounds of breathingand Feel for the exhalation of air.
Mainly you want to watch for the chest rising and falling. However, since this isn't always easy to see, you may want to lay your head on their chest and try to feel the rise and fall.
If the chest does not rise when blowing air into the mouth it means that the patient has gone into cardiac arrest.
The rise and fall is the tides.
You should see equal chest rise and fall bilaterally, and the patient should show signs of improvement, such as turning from cyanotic to pink.
it means that the nation could fall or rise in that night