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Posted
I think you can get 100% with a BVM reservoir @ 15LPM with a good seal.

That's what the Brady book says. Actually it's "Approaching" 100%...

...but I think I'd pass on being bagged just for that "buzz" :cry:

-Trevor

  • 10 months later...
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Posted

Brady's 2005 Paramedic Drug Guide has a "card" in it. You can get all the information, including mechanism of Action, Contraindications, Indications, Pre-Hospital Uses, Adverse affects, Cautions, etc. Great book, and pocket sized.

Posted

Just a little more info. In the workplace, if you are placed on oxygen by medical resonders for any reason, it becomes an OSHA recordable injury.

another oddity: If you get stung by a bee at work, it also becomes an OSHA recordable injury even if you don't need treatment. Most people don't turn it in to management, but it is true.

Posted
WOW !.. We are really digging up old threads... please, when answering a post, you might to look at the date.. almost a year ago ...

Be safe,

R/R 911

The correct phrase would be: "Holy old thread Batman!"

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

We actualy just covered O2 in school...here is what i was given..

Class: Gas

Trade Name: oxygen

Indications: Hypoxia, difficulty breathing

Action: Onset is immediate and the peak effect is one minute; Transported to the cells via hemoglobin and is required for the breakdown of glucose into a useable form of energy

Precautions: Use with caution with patients with COPD, it MAY suppress the hpoxic drive ; Prolonged exposure to the eyes of a neonate may cause damage ( retrolental fibroplasia).

Contraindications: None

Dosage:

Nasal Canula 1-6 L/min 24-44%

Simple Face Mask 8-10 L/min 40-60%

Venturi Mask 4-12 L/min 24-50%

Partial Rebreather 6-10 L/min 35-60%

Nonrebreather 8-12 L/min 60-90%

BVM w/ resevoir 10-15 L/min 40-90%

Pocket Mask w/ sup. 10-15 L/min 100%

Demand Valve 10-15 L/min 100%

Pediatric Dosage: same as adult

Route: orally

Side Effects: Possible dried mucous membrane ; possible irritation of the upper respiratory tract

Posted

First of all oxygen is a diatomic molecule, that has many uses, oxygen therapy as know in the medical field, is the use of oxygen as a drug, for acute and chronic medical purposes, oxygen can be beneficial to a patient when administered as a drug. Although that there could be a case to argue that Oxygen is not a drug, due to the fact that it isn't a chemical compound, it is an element [that exists as a diatomic molecule - due to electron cloud stability], however, it is used as a substance in a medial component, so it can be validly classed as a drug. Oxygen therapy can have a negative impact on a patients condition, although it is not normally withheld.

Regards

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