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What happens during the G2 phase is that cells grow rapidly and make protein.
When algae rapidly produce
Breaths are given too quickly or with too much force.
Giving very large breaths during rescue breathing can force air to reach the stomach, causing the patient to vomit. Vomiting while the patient is unconscious poses a risk to airway management as it may become obstructed. Furthermore, you do not have time to be giving very slow, forceful breaths are chest compressions take precedence in cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Bacteria grow most rapidly during the log phase.
what orgens resposible for digestion
Newborns: Average 44 breaths per minuteInfants: 20-40 breaths per minutePreschool children: 20-30 breaths per minuteOlder children: 16-25 breaths per minuteAdults: 12-20 breaths per minuteAdults during strenuous exercise 35-45 breaths per minuteAthletes' peak 60-70 breaths per minute
400000000
Let's see: I take about 12 breaths a minute. There are 60 minutes in an hour. That means I take 720 breaths an hour. That means I take about 11,520 breaths during the 16 hours when I am awake. When I fall asleep my breathing slows down. At 10 breaths a minute that is 600 breaths an hour. that will be 4,800 breaths when I am asleep. 11,520+4,800= Whoops my adding machine just disappeared from the screen.
Lungs Stomach Heart Brain gets better
this happens because the stomach does not accept the food. therefore the food gets vomited out
For BLS (not lay rescuer), rescue breathing (RB) is 10-12 breaths per minute for an adult, which is True. Lay rescuer, adult RB has been eliminated. If you mean during CPR, adult (30 compressions to 2 breaths), you will not get 10 breaths per minute during CPR which makes the statement false.