tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-63918813176254182942009-07-09T07:14:58.476-05:00Defibrillator SolutionsAED Defibrillator Blog - Training, success stories and more...Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-31986415673608475512009-04-03T23:47:00.003-05:002009-04-03T23:59:30.479-05:00Healthy Heart Secrets and Remedies to Avoid Heart TroublesThere are numerous causes of heart troubles. Most of the times it is the wrong eating habits which cause obesity thus giving extra strain on the heart. Excessive amount of salt in the diet is another cause of additional heart strain by elevating blood pressure. Heart palpitation is most of the times because of fermentation and gas in stomach.<br /><br />It is generally considered that heart troubles are because of the damage to the muscles of the heart or the valves. This is the wrong assumption. The fact is that heart has become weak because of the poor circulation of blood. Ideally the blood should be circulated closer to the body surface to nourish the muscles and skin. But in bad conditions this blood is diverted to the inner side and overstrains the heart and digestive organs.<br /><br />There are certain types of heart troubles that even get worse by coffee, tea, alcohol and tobacco. Sometimes the cause of heart trouble is the intake of too much white products and sugarcane products. If a large amount of processed food is consumed it causes the heart to grow weaker and weaker. Actually this processing robs the food from the strength giving properties. These health giving properties are required to strengthen the body and the heart.<br /><br />Most of the heart troubles can be defeated. The consumption of salt in diet must be controlled and carbohydrate controlled diet must be followed to get rid of any excessive weight.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Herbal Medicines - There are many herbal medicines that are of great help in any kind of heart trouble.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tansy</span><br />Tansy is good for the heart trouble. It controls the palpitations of heart in no time. It gives strength to the weak veins. Remember it should only be taken in the controlled dosages. It is better to read thoroughly the suggested dosage of particular Tansy you buy.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Lobelia</span><br />A most famous relaxant among herbs is Lobelia. It calms down the nerves, stomach, lungs and inflammation.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Valerians</span><br />It is an excellent tonic for the nerves. It is not only soothing and quieting but also relieves the heart palpitations. It also helps in preventing from cold and fever. It also prevents stomach and gas problem.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">These herbal medicines are of great help in preventing and delaying the risk of stokes and heart troubles</span>. But again they should be used in combination with the prescription medicines. Any sort of such advice should not be superseded by the doctor’s recommendations.<hr /><br />There are many things you can do to avoid heart troubles today by simply keeping your <a href="http://allaboutdefibrillators.blogspot.com/2009/04/keep-your-heart-healthy-cholesterol-and.html">heart healthy</a>. But in the unfortunate event you have a heart attack, you may want to consider an <a href="http://defibrillatorsolutions.com/aed-for-your-home.html">AED for your home</a>.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-3198641567360847551?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-6353548779662225112009-01-24T21:00:00.001-06:002009-01-24T21:03:16.062-06:00Buying A Defibrillator<p align="justify">Lambro crown - defibrillator success rate no pitting or corrosion of cardiac defibrillator rate burberry ties maryland park university contact lens buying. Philips onsite, heartstart aed difbtech lifeline aed buy defibrillator saves a life as law takes effect heart restarted at long island teaming up with adjacent districts to negotiate better prices by buying. Customer revived with defibrillator still critical - 17 aug 2007 - nz a blog is sort of like buying a jacuzzi for your home once you have one, you feel compelled to use it, even if you don t particularly feel the urge to continue interacting with. Rapid city journal news features hold the defibrillator consumers are unlikely to benefit from buying household versions of emergency the government-supported clinical trial used the heartstart home defibrillator from philips. Page 73 productions blog archive blog defibrillator heartstart home defibrillator - m5068aco1,philips usually ships in 3 to 5 days this item is available baby boutique gifts for baby maternity by liz lange buying.</p><div class="fullpost"><p align="justify">Study finds home defibrillator is no help - business exchange tips on buying magnets tips for buying magnets that work for you are not a medical device and should not be used with a pacemaker, defibrillator or. "defibrillator saves a life as law takes effect " dec 4, 2002 new see a map of the automated external defibrillator (aed) location at atkinson hall buying. Ucsd blink: automated external defibrillator (aed) locations: marine you need your own automated external defibrillator first take a critical look at the pros and cons of owning an aed then you and your doctor can decide if it's worth buying the. Buying a defibrillator indystar.com: boston scientific wins appeal over defibrillator patent find a new car research a car blue book values buying guides place an ad online and print.</p><p align="justify">Boston scientific wins appeal over defibrillator patent indystar.com see a map of the automated external defibrillator (aed) location in marine physical buying. The north pole magnets bareis became alarmed when he realized that churches within rapid city were buying defibrillators as a matter of routine he worried that the person wielding the defibrillator. Aed volunteers serve florida community - neighborhood heart watch search results. Buying a defibrillator businessweek business exchange consumers are unlikely to benefit from buying household versions of emergency equipment meant to revive victims of sudden heart seizures. The valley hospital a suburban palm beach community recently created a volunteer defibrillator team, buying automated external defibrillators (aeds) and training residents to use them in case a.</p></div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-635354877966222511?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-54036457847469985022008-11-30T16:28:00.001-06:002008-12-02T22:14:58.353-06:00How to Reduce Risk of Heart Diseases - A Simple SolutionIn an attempt to help reduce the need of an <a href="http://defibrillatorsolutions.com/">AED</a> (automated external defibrillator), we have written a series of articles. Over the next few days we will post information on how people can keep their heart healthy. We hope you find this series helpful.<br /><h2>Cardiovascular Problems Pose a Serious Threat</h2><br />Today medical science is of the belief that regular exercise should be the part of our daily routine just like getting dressed, brushing the teeth and taking lunch is. Presently millions of Americans are suffering from heart diseases. Approximately 1 in each 4 Americans is suffering from some cardiovascular problem. For some, the problem would get serious this year, even to the point of requiring the use of an AED. 2 Americans are dying after every minute from the heart disease. These are the alarming figures. <p style="text-align: justify;">If the reader of this article is having some of the symptoms of cardiovascular problem, he should stop immediately, look at himself and take action immediately. This is essential to prevent something serious from occurring. There is no such disease that is affecting individuals like heart disease.</p><h2>Are You at Risk of Heart Disease?</h2><p style="text-align: justify;">If the thought after reading this comes in your mind, “I’m in my 20’s or 30’s why to think about heart disease now”. Then just answer “Are you a parent, a spouse or a child?” “How much important are you for others in your life?” Think about it logically and then answer do you want this to really go late? After few days, months or years the doctor may give a prescription in your hand saying that “You are at risk of heart disease”. Or even worse “Do you want to wait until you have a heart attack, and need someone to use an AED to revive you?”</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">There is one amazingly simple thing that can assist in preventing this chronic ailment. This is “Exercise”. When an individual exercises he lowers down his chances of getting any heart related issue by almost 45%. The exercise also causes the individual to increase the HDL or good cholesterol.</p><h2>Want to Exercise?</h2><p style="text-align: justify;">Exercising particularly for heart means that you have to go for the intense but fairly short workouts. It is better to avoid strenuous exercises in the beginning and proceed gradually. Better take a start with some aerobics. This will open the blood vessels, reduce cholesterol levels and increase the level of good cholesterol HDL. If possible join a gym or aerobic class. If you are not socially inclined you can work out at home with the help of a good aerobic video.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The idea behind all this is only that you have to get out of the couch and start moving. The best proposal is to exercise as a family. Go for the fast walk, or go for swimming or bike riding together. The point is you have to live healthier not only for you but also for the other members of your family. </p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-5403645784746998502?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-48117997342722675592008-02-18T22:31:00.000-06:002008-02-18T22:34:45.038-06:00Congress Pushes for AED's in Schools<div class="inside-copy"><span style="font-size:78%;">By <a class="linkedBylineName" href="http://www.usatoday.com/community/tags/reporter.aspx?id=543">Robert Davis</a>, USA TODAY<br /><br /></span>A grass-roots push to put defibrillators into every school — to revive children who suffer cardiac arrest as well as their teachers, custodians and visiting family members — may get a jolt from Congress.</div> <p class="inside-copy">Nobody knows today how many people collapse inside schools or at school sporting events from cardiac arrest, but cities and states have begun counting the numbers of lives saved by defibrillators in schools. The devices are required in federal buildings and airliners. An automated external defibrillator (AED) is a computerized device that talks users, including children, through lifesaving steps to zap a dying heart back to a normal beat during a cardiac arrest. </p> <p class="inside-copy">In Ohio, 13 lives have been saved with school defibrillators since 2005. In New York, 38 lives have been saved since 2002.</p> <p class="inside-copy"> </p><div class="inside-copy"><b>FIGHTING FOR DEFIBRILLATORS: </b><a href="http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2008-02-17-school-defibrillators-side_N.htm">Grassroots group targets halls of Congress</a></div> <p class="inside-copy">Schools are a logical place to put defibrillators, doctors say, because on any given day as much as 20% of a community's population passes through its schools.</p> <div id="tagCrumbs"><span class="tagListLabel">FIND MORE STORIES IN: </span><a class="piped-taglist-string" href="http://www.usatoday.com/community/tags/topic.aspx?req=tag&amp;tag=Congress">Congress</a> | <a class="piped-taglist-string" href="http://www.usatoday.com/community/tags/topic.aspx?req=tag&amp;tag=Ohio">Ohio</a> | <a class="piped-taglist-string" href="http://www.usatoday.com/community/tags/topic.aspx?req=tag&amp;tag=Josh%20Miller">Josh Miller</a> | <a class="piped-taglist-string" href="http://www.usatoday.com/community/tags/topic.aspx?req=tag&amp;tag=Emergency%20Medical%20Services">Emergency Medical Services</a> | <a class="piped-taglist-string" href="http://www.usatoday.com/community/tags/topic.aspx?req=tag&amp;tag=John%20Acompora">John Acompora</a> </div> <p class="inside-copy">Though many of the people saved by the defibrillators have been adults, the preventable deaths of children have fueled the grass-roots efforts. That includes 15-year-old Josh Miller of Barberton, Ohio, who died during a high school football game on Oct. 27, 2000. </p> <p class="inside-copy">His death is part of what is driving the effort in Congress to pass a bill that would provide federal matching money to help put the $1,000 devices in every school. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Betty Sutton, D-Ohio, calls for 3-to-1 federal matching funds to pay for defibrillators in schools.</p> <p class="inside-copy">"It's a great idea," says Peter Moyer, Boston's medical director for the Emergency Medical Services. "It will save lives, it's good for student self-esteem and introduces students to health careers."</p> <p class="inside-copy">Boston — which has one of the best track records of saving victims of cardiac arrest — has had automated external defibrillators in all of its public high schools and some of its elementary schools. Medics teach CPR and defibrillator use at the high schools. Similar efforts are underway in Nashville, where the fire department has trained health teachers to become CPR and AED instructors. The goal is to certify every ninth- and 10th-grader in CPR and AED use. So far, 70 of 132 schools have the devices. </p> <p class="inside-copy">Across Tennessee, there have been 22 cardiac arrests at schools over the past five years, says Mark Meredith, medical director for Nashville's Public Access Defibrillation program. An AED was used to revive six of those people at the school.</p> <p class="inside-copy">Getting a shock from a defibrillator within just a few minutes of cardiac arrest is key to saving these people. The odds of survival decrease 10% for every minute that a victim goes without such a shock, meaning that waiting for the typical EMS response to a 911 call is most often fatal.</p> <p class="inside-copy">"We've got the best paramedics in the world," says Terry Gordon, an Akron cardiologist who pushed for every school in Ohio to have a defibrillator in the wake of Miller's death. "But they may be on another call or stuck in traffic, and they just can't get there fast enough."</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-4811799734272267559?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-4619450532292277052007-10-22T05:54:00.000-05:002007-10-22T06:06:52.818-05:00AED and RITE used on Unconscious man on AirplaneHere is another Automated Electronic Defibrillator success story. This one involves 3 NYC firefighters on-board with their new invention the "Rapid Intervention Tactical Evacuation" known as "RITE", which they would be demonstrating to a manufacturer a short while later.<br /><br />Here is part of the article:<br /><br /><h1> Bravest, sure, but maybe the Smartest, too </h1> <hr /> Sunday, October 21st 2007<br />Michael Daly<br /><br /><p>The invention is designed to be compact, but it would not fit in an overhead compartment, and a flight attendant stashed it in a closet in first class.</p> <p>The three inventors were flying coach, and they settled into a row of seats toward the back as Delta Flight 17 to Atlanta prepared to depart from Kennedy Airport on Monday morning.</p> <p>The plane was just beginning to roll away from the gate when a young man jumped up two rows in front of the inventors. He began to tug at an older man who had slumped over in the seat next to him.</p> <p>"Papa! Papa!" the young man called out.</p> <p>The fear in his face was unmistakable as he continued trying to rouse the older man.</p> <p>"Sit down!" a flight attendant ordered.</p> <p>"Papa! Papa!" the young man continued.</p> <p>The inventors leapt up and rushed over. The older man appeared to be unconscious, and the inventors raised his limp arm over his head and let go. A conscious person will instinctively move his falling hand so as not to strike himself.</p> <p>The man's hand struck his face, confirming this was more serious than a little drowsiness. The inventors learned anew the difficulty of moving a full-grown unconscious person in a tight space as they shifted the man to the bulkhead area. They announced themselves to the startled passengers and crew.</p> <p>"We're New York City firemen! Get out of the way!"</p> <p>Firefighter Tommy Fee put his fingertips against the man's carotid artery. He felt no pulse and did chest compressions as retired Lt. Frank Haskell called for the <a href="http://www.defibrillatorsolutions.com">defibrillator</a> aboard all flights. Planes also carry an oxygen tank, and retired Lt. Mike Harty got that going.</p> <p>A flight attendant brought the defibrillator. The firefighters tore open the man's shirt and applied the two pads. A mechanical voice crackled from the device.</p> <p><i>"Analyzing patient.... Prepare to shock. ... Step away. ... Shock.</i>"</p> <p>Fee hit the red button marked Shock. The resulting jolt of electricity made the man's body jump.</p> <p><i>"Analyzing patient.</i>"</p> <p>The firefighters saw a bounding line on the defibrillator's small monitor screen.</p> <p>"Back to life," Fee later said.</p>To learn more about the <a href="http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2007/10/21/2007-10-21_bravest_sure_but_maybe_the_smartest_too-4.html">RITE</a> success story and how the patient is doing, click on the word.<br /><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-461945053229227705?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-73125988667045733832007-09-24T21:27:00.000-05:002007-09-24T21:40:07.209-05:00Defibrillator Credited in Saving Rochester, MN Man's Life<span class="title"><strong><span style="font-size:130%;">Reliving Death</span><br /></strong></span><span class="brief"><span style="font-size:85%;">Jenna Gordon<br /><a href="http://www.kttc.com/News/index.php?ID=18586"> KTTC TV</a></span><br /><br /></span><span class="brief"> ROCHESTER, MN -- Considered dead, a Rochester man makes a miraculous recovery thanks to two off-duty police officers and a heart shocking machine. Now a year and a half later, NewsCenters Jenna Gordon takes us to Saint Marys where the survivor listens to his life changing day.<br /><br />In May of 2006, Al Fritsche's life changed forever. He had just run 20 miles in Soldiers Field Park preparing for an upcoming marathon and was on his way home.<br /> <br />"Walking along here and kept getting dizzier and dizzier, and so I went to lean on the fence and the last thing I remember is looking out in the golf course," says Fritsche.<br /> <br />Off duty officers Gretchen and John O'Neill drove by the park and thought something just wasn't quite right. It could be said it was fate that the two off duty officers saw Al through all these trees and shrubs to where he laid standing getting dizzy and eventually falling down.<br /> <br />"For her to notice this runner looked like he was in trouble rather than just resting. I owe my life to her and John," say Fritsche.<br /> <br />Al had gone into Sudden Cardiac Arrest.<br /><br />The two officers called for help and started <a href="http://www.defibrillatorsolutions.com/aed-cpr.html">CPR</a>. And only minutes later another officer came with a <a href="http://www.defibrillatorsolutions.com/">defibrillator</a>, which ended up saving his life.<br /> <br />"What a pleasure to see you right here today."<br /><br />Defibrillators record sound and for the first time in a year and a half Al is listening to his fateful day.<br /><br />"Heart rhythm. Come on Al, Come on Al."<br /><br />"He was dead."<br /><br />"It's a, makes me realize how lucky I am. All these people helping," says Fritsche.<br /><br />"In at least 64 percent of people the hearts fibrillate at least one time and that's what happened in Al's case, So that required a 2nd shock," says Dr. White.<br /><br />Dr. White says Al's case was a best case scenario. "His arrest was witnesses, he was attended to properly a <a href="http://www.axiomsolutionsllc.com/">defibrillator</a> in a police car was made available and he was shocked properly and he regained pulses," says Dr. White.<br /><br />"I was in a different place. Very calm, peaceful and quiet. I never felt anything like it before in my life. It was wonderful," says Fritsche.<br /> <br />Al woke up the next morning feeling great, like his heart never gave out. He says he wouldn't change the experience no matter how life threatening.<br /> <br />"I'm really glad it happened to be frank about it. It confirms a feeling I had that death is not to be feared," says Fritsche.<br /><br />And listening to this life changing event, Al says he's got a life changing look on life.<br /><br />Dr. White began a program where defibrillators are in most emergency response vehicles, and he says in Rochester they've saved 101 lives since the program started in 1990.</span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-7312598866704573383?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-45250495567840829442007-07-13T07:51:00.000-05:002007-07-13T08:13:39.489-05:00Petersborough, a Small city in Ontario takes the lead installing AED'sAnother small town sees the benefit of AEDs and has been installing and training city employees how to use them. Here is part of the story from the Peterborough Examiner describing their plans to purchase even more <a href="http://allaboutdefibrillators.blogspot.com/">automated external defibrillators</a>.<b><br /><br />Shocking help; Portable defibrillators helpful; healthy lifestyle even better</b></span> <br /> Editorial - Friday, June 22, 2007 <b>Updated</b> @ 7:28:38 AM <br /><br />If there is such a thing as a good place in Ontario to have a heart attack, Peterborough is on the list. <br /><br />The reason? Portable defibrillators. Five years ago Peterborough was the first smaller city in the province to install the units in public buildings and train employees to use them.<br /><br />At the time, automated external defibrillators were put in the Memorial Centre, Evinrude and Kinsmen arenas. A year later Trent University and Sir Sandford Fleming College each got one.<br /><br />Last year four were installed at the Robinson Place provincial government building at Water and Charlotte streets. <br /><br />And on Wednesday, Peterborough city and county went on the list of six communities that will get the first wave of an army of the potentially life-saving machines that are being financed by the Ministry of Health Promotion, the Ontario Heart and Stroke Foundation and a private company, Transamerica Life of Canada.<br /><br />The city will get seven more of the portable units. Peterborough County gets its first 18 units. They are worth $3,000 apiece.<br /><br />The program will also pay to train eight to 10 employees at each of the locations to use them.<a href="http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/webapp/sitepages/content.asp?contentid=582526&catname=Editorial&classif=">...</a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-4525049556784082944?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-11748208729515760082007-04-19T07:29:00.000-05:002007-04-19T07:41:45.506-05:00<h2>Athletic club saves man's life</h2> <p>For the second time in a little over a year a quick-thinking worker at a Superior Athletic Club saved a heart attack victim's life using an emergency defibrillator.</p> <p>A man in his 50s collapsed early Friday on a racquetball court at the fitness center on Cardley Avenue in Medford.</p> <p>Michelle Gordon was working the front desk when a man approached her seeking help. She gave the man a trauma bag containing the <a href="http://allaboutdefibrillators.blogspot.com/">automated external defibrillator (AED)</a> and called 9-1-1, said club manager Dee Gillen.</p> <p>The man soon returned, saying the victim had stopped breathing. Gordon then sprung into action, Gillen said.</p> <p>"She was helped by two club members," Gillen said. "Michelle applied the pads and they were able to deliver the shock that saved him."</p><p>The man's identity was not available at press time. Fortunately for him, the two members who helped him happened to be a firefighter and a nurse.</p> <p>In November 2005, a similar incident occurred at the Superior Athletic Club on Barnett Road. A woman collapsed during a racquetball game and was saved by a club employee who knew how to use an AED.</p> <p>"The AEDs cost only around $2,000, but are so worth it," Gillen said.</p> <p>Superior Athletic Club has AEDs in place in all three of its locations. Employees are trained how to use them during a <a href="http://www.defibrillatorsolutions.com/automated-heart-defibrillator-device.html">heart saver</a> course they attend.</p> <p>Gordon and the two club members will receive American Heart Association awards.</p> <p>Gillen said Oregon has no law mandating that fitness clubs are equipped with AEDs. She hopes the Legislature does something about that soon.</p> <p>"More and more <a href="http://appliance-repair-directory.com/LinkAssistant/by-state.html">states</a> are requiring them," Gillen said. "I'd like to see Oregon move that way."</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-1174820872951576008?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-14779555811240542472007-04-11T22:10:00.000-05:002007-04-11T22:13:14.450-05:00CPR Training and the effectiveness of using an AEDAn Automated External Defibrillator (AED) is a self-contained defibrillator device designed for portability and ease of use. AEDs are available for $1000 for a basic model to several thousand dollars for a more fully-featured or durable model. There is limited evidence to suggest that biphasic defibrillation is superior to monophasic defibrillators, although the small capacitor size required for the defibrillator can create significant cost and size savings-- essential for the proliferation of Automated External Defibrillators.<br /><a href="http://www.defibrillatorsolutions.com"><br />Automated External Defibrillators</a> are commonly found in large gathering places, such as airports, casinos, sports stadiums, and college campuses. Solid-gel electrodes are more convenient, because there is no need to clean the patient's skin after removing the electrodes. The apex electrode is applied to the left side of the patient, just below and to the left of the pectoral muscle.<br /><br />While ventricular fibrillation is still the major primary rhythm in cardiac arrest, nowadays available AEDs can be used especially by the trained and even untrained laymen. Untrained laypersons are able to use AEDs quickly and safely. Claude Beck successfully revived a patient in an operating room using an open-chest electric defibrillation device, which had been designed by him and then built by his friend James Rand.<br /><br />Studies and Research on AED's:<br />One study offered students a new teaching strategy called "learning by teaching", where medical students trained SCD survivors at their homes in BLS and the use of an AED. In one study three physicians skilled in providing and teaching advanced life support (certified instructors of the European Resuscitation Council) were present and recorded data while each student operated the AED. Out of 127 trainees, 87 (69%) were rated by their trainers as that they can deal with failures/disturbances of the AED by themselves.<br /><br />Facts to Consider:<br />Since the first clinical use of AEDs in the early 1980s, developments in technology have led to initiatives by health and governmental organizations to develop PAD programs. Many monitor defibrilators provide three, five or 12-lead EKG monitoring to compensate for this downfall of the paddles. For many years, the American Heart Association has postulated inclusion of AED use in basic life support training.<br /><br />AED Usage and Training:<br />Many students consider that as AEDs are more or less self-explaining, learning by doing would be the best way to teach CPR and BLS. When a patient has been admitted due to heart concerns, and the physician or nurse has determined that he or she is at risk of arrhythmia, they may apply adhesive electrodes to the patient in anticipation of any concerns that may arise. There is evidence that use of automated external defibrillators (AEDs) by laypersons improves rates of survival from cardiac arrest, but there is no consensus on the optimal content and duration of training for this purpose.<br /><br />Automated Edternal Defibrillators are designed to provide immediate defibrillation to high-risk patients. The implementation of PAD programmes in the future will depend mainly on the willingness of the public to participate in AED or cardiopulmonary resuscitation courses.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-1477955581124054247?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391881317625418294.post-87687768888598973692007-03-17T10:41:00.000-05:002007-03-17T10:44:35.973-05:00Learn about defibrillators, their differences and where to buy them.Please check back often as information will be added pertaining to the Automated External Defibrillator also known as an AED<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6391881317625418294-8768776888859897369?l=www.defibrillatorsolutions.com%2Fblog'/></div>Dave Trosdahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12172207369033423048noreply@blogger.com1