itisneverlupus
Forum Ride Along
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Alright, I may be looking into it to much, but its been a while and I have a quick question.
When I was in school it said to cease CPR when the patient regains a pulse. Then I read a while back on a AHA (I think it was) site to keep going regardless if they regain a pulse (ie not even check, just keep pumping), and somewhere today online I read that you do not stop unless the patient is responsive/moves or ALS takes over.
IF the first is true, what generally constitutes a regain of pulse: 6 bpm may not exactly be a great pulse to maintain efficient perfusion (but normal if very cold weather, etc.). Continue anyways?
What if I have no AED on standby (ie I'm in the civilian world, not on shift)?
Thanks, I appreciate the help.
Lupus
When I was in school it said to cease CPR when the patient regains a pulse. Then I read a while back on a AHA (I think it was) site to keep going regardless if they regain a pulse (ie not even check, just keep pumping), and somewhere today online I read that you do not stop unless the patient is responsive/moves or ALS takes over.
IF the first is true, what generally constitutes a regain of pulse: 6 bpm may not exactly be a great pulse to maintain efficient perfusion (but normal if very cold weather, etc.). Continue anyways?
What if I have no AED on standby (ie I'm in the civilian world, not on shift)?
Thanks, I appreciate the help.
Lupus