MrBooger
Forum Ride Along
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I've taken many ACLS classes and half the time it is taught that compressions and bagging should remain separate. You know 30:2, but once a patient is intubated then bagging can remain at a slow constant pace. The other half of the time it is taught that it should still remain separate at 30:2.
I believe that it should still remain separate. Yes, we know that the air is moving directly into the lungs and not into the stomach, but if I compress the bag and force air into the lungs while someone else does a chest compression at the same time and is forcing air out of the lungs, those two opposing forces inside the lungs is enough to cause barotrauma. Also, it isn't doing anything beneficial for the patient since it is like taking a straw and me blowing in one end, and you blowing in the other end. No air movement in either direction, just a lot of pressure in the straw.
Am I correct? Is this what you have all been taught as well?
I believe that it should still remain separate. Yes, we know that the air is moving directly into the lungs and not into the stomach, but if I compress the bag and force air into the lungs while someone else does a chest compression at the same time and is forcing air out of the lungs, those two opposing forces inside the lungs is enough to cause barotrauma. Also, it isn't doing anything beneficial for the patient since it is like taking a straw and me blowing in one end, and you blowing in the other end. No air movement in either direction, just a lot of pressure in the straw.
Am I correct? Is this what you have all been taught as well?