It's probably sick! Take it to a vet!
28 breaths per minute is more normal than 70-80
Give rescue breaths without compressions
more than 40-50 times
Give rescue breaths without compressions
Approx. 30 per min. More than 50 is called tachypnea and may indicate respiratory insufficiency, but may also be a normal phenomenon accompanying fever.
Newborns: 30-40 breaths per minute Less Than 1 Year: 30-40 breaths per minute 1-3 Years: 23-35 breaths per minute 3-6 Years: 20-30 breaths per minute 6-12 Years: 18-26 breaths per minute 12-17 Years: 12-20 breaths per minute Adults Over 18: 12-20 breaths per minute. Then that is 1440 minutes a day: 1440 x (16) = 23040 a day A year: 23040 x 365 = 8'409'600 a year A normal 20 year old will have breathed 168'192'000 times since they were born. Now try to work out yourself how much you have breathed.
30-40 breaths per minute
give breaths without chest compression
It is used for the breaths in rescue breathing & CPR.
Depends - 2054 megabytes of what? - 1 minute of MP3 music in a fairly high quality takes about 1 MB, but the amount of MB/minute can really vary a lot. A minute of a DVD-quality movie takes up much more space than that.
The rate will vary according to age. The youngest will have a faster rate. The number of breaths we take per minute is a sign of how often our brain is telling our bodies to breathe. If the oxygen level in the blood is low, or alternately if the carbon dioxide level in the blood is high, our body is instructed to breathe more often. For example, having a severe infection increases the carbon dioxide produced in the body, so even if there's a normal level of oxygen in the blood, the brain instructs the body to breathe more often to clear the carbon dioxide. Children have faster respiratory rates than adults, and the "normal" respiratory rate can vary significantly by age. The normal ranges of respiratory rates for children (at rest) of different ages include: Newborn: 30-60 breaths per minute Infant (1 to 12 months): 30-60 breaths per minute Toddler (1-2 years): 24-40 breaths per minute Preschooler (3-5 years): 22-34 breaths per minute School-age child (6-12 years): 18-30 breaths per minute Adolescent (13-17 years): 12-16 breaths per minute
less than a minute