Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
You might even have trapped some of his expired air and measured the carbon dioxide content.
"Skillful performance of expired air breathing is an easily learned, lifesaving procedure.
Information about expired air breathing should be disseminated as widely as possible".
Some fluid is lost through perspiration (part of the body's temperature control mechanism) and as water vapor in expired air.
Most of roxithromycin is secreted unchanged into the bile and some in expired air.
'Cardiopulmonary resuscitation' means a combination of expired air ventilation and chest compression.
In this study, he demonstrated that expired air blown into the endotracheal tube maintained normal oxygen saturation.
This expired air typically composed of:
But then the expired air is saved and recycled back through canisters that remove the carbon dioxide while replenishing the oxygen in the tank.
Capnographs (or capnometer) are frequently used in medicine for capnography, measuring the carbon dioxide content in inspired and expired air.
The swazzle is positioned between the tongue and the roof of the mouth so that expired air passes between the two metal strips, causing the reed to vibrate.
Several years later James Elam met Peter Safar, also an anesthesiologist, convincing him to join the effort to convince the world that expired air ventilation was effective.
Many feature 18mm inlets to support supplemental oxygen, which increases the oxygen being delivered from the approximate 17% available in the expired air of the rescuer to around 40-50%.
So long as the body is getting rid of the tissue-substance essential to pregnancy, but now without any purpose, more than the usual amount of waste material is present in the expired air.
Cries of anguish were heard from the medical instructor, who was beginning to despair after seeing his practice resuscitation doll murdered by an overenthusiastic driver attempting to learn the principles of expired air resuscitation.
Once inside, the volunteer will be linked to a battery of equipment to monitor blood pressure, heart sounds, the content of expired air, blood oxygen saturation levels and the rate by which air is being used.
He could determine the position of the human center of gravity, calculate and measured inspired and expired air volumes, and showed that inspiration is muscle-driven and expiration is due to tissue elasticity.
The presence of the enriched CO2 compensates for the CO2 losses in the expired air, not matched by metabolic production, that occurs during hyperventilation, and so maintains CO2 levels at normal.
Formally known as BRESCO (Baltimore Refuse Energy Systems Co.), the incinerator has been unyielding by controversy over air pollution and for operating with an expired air pollution permit.
In conducting their comparative experiments, the researchers have inveigled a wide spectrum of animals into galloping themselves windless on treadmills and sticking their snouts in masks, where expired air can be captured for analysis to see how much oxygen is metabolized each second.
Models used to simulate resuscitation procedures are an invaluable aid, and enable the nurse to practice the skills of external cardiac massage and expired air ventilation; but however complete the simulation of the emergency situation, the emotional effects of the real situation cannot be taught.
A 1927 paper produced by Emil Bogen, who collected air in a football bladder and then tested this air for traces of alcohol, discovered that the alcohol content of 2 litres of expired air was a little greater than that of 1 cc of urine.
Incoming cold air is warmed by the animal's body heat before entering the lungs, and water is condensed from the expired air and captured before the deer's breath is exhaled, used to moisten dry incoming air and possibly absorbed into the blood through the mucous membranes.