Yes, CPR continues to supply oxygen to the brain.
When you perform CPR, you provide blood, oxygen, and life to the heart and brain.
The brain can survive for up to about six minutes after the heart stops. The reason to learn cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is that if CPR is started within six minutes of cardiac arrest, the brain may survive the lack of oxygen. After about six minutes without CPR, however, the brain begins to die.
A baby can survive for a few minutes without oxygen before experiencing brain damage or death. It is crucial to act quickly and provide rescue breathing or CPR to restore oxygen supply to the baby as soon as possible.
If the brain was without oxygen for 4 to 6 minutes can caused brain dead. Early CPR is needed to prevent brain damage or hypoxia.
There is no reserve as such, oxygen is carried by haemoglobin molecules in the blood. It is transfered to parts of the body when it requires it. As such if a person stops breathing, the amount of brain damage sustained from a lack of oxygen increases with time, from approximately 4 minutes there is a risk. After 15 minutes it is very risky. This is why it is so important to start CPR as soon as possible.
The brain can survive for up to about six minutes after the heart stops. The reason to learn cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is that if CPR is started within six minutes of cardiac arrest, the brain may survive the lack of oxygen. After about six minutes without CPR, however, the brain begins to die.
CPR continues the pumping action of the heart by compressing it between the backbone & breastbone. The rescue breaths supply oxygen to the lungs. CPR circulates oxygenated blood throughout the body supplying needed oxygen to vital organs tosustain life.
If cardiac arrest lasts longer than three to four minutes, there usually will be generalized damage to the brain. The prompt initiation of CPR certainly makes a huge difference in ensuring that the brain gets an adequate supply of blood and oxygen.
Early CPR is an important link in the cardiac chain of survival because performing CPR provides oxygenated blood to the vital organs until an AED and more advanced medical personnel become available to take over to give advanced cardiac life support.
CPR is not meant to revive someone. It is used when there is no pulse or there is an insufficient pules. CPR can help save a life, because it will help supply temporary oxygen and blood flow. If received early enough a victim is more likely to survive. It will also help reduce the damage to the brain and other organs, because the organs will still have oxygen and blood flow.
CPR is only used to revive victims whose hearts are not beating properly or have stopped altogether. The condition of heart not functioning properly is tachycardia. When all electricity in the heart has ceased, the heart is in a condition called asystole. CPR can be used to revive victims of the first condition when a defibrillator is not available. CPR must be used for the second condition. The components of CPR are used in other procedures. CPR style breaths are used in rescue breathing. Rescue Breathing is used to supply oxygen to victims whose hearts are pumping efficiently but have stopped breathing. CPR style chest compressions are used to force food out of an unconscious choking victim.
CPR makes the blood flow round the body to the brain with oxygen. It basically feeds the brain with oxygen. When you give the breaths it puts oxygen into the lungs and body. When you do the compressions, you push the blood to the muscles (around the body), then draw it back to the heart. I hope that helped. :)