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Cadet Name: Date: 1. (U4C2L3:F1) Your friend receives a deep cu
Cadet Name: Date: 1. (U4C2L3:F1) Your friend receives a deep cu

... 28. (U4C2L3:G18) T or F: A tourniquet use can actually kill the limb it is meant to save. A) True B) False 29. (U4C2L3:G19) In cases of severe bleeding that does not slow or stop when direct pressure is applied, how do you stop the bleeding? A) Apply a tourniquet B) By using finger pressure on the p ...
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700.2 Bloodborne Pathogens Policy

... materials that may result from the performance of an employee’s duties. This exposure determination requires a listing of all job classifications in which all employees may be expected to incur occupational exposure. Job classifications which are in this category must be listed on the form in Append ...
Estimation of the Residual Volume of the Ventricle of the Dog`s Heart
Estimation of the Residual Volume of the Ventricle of the Dog`s Heart

... that it be eliminated. In an occasional experiment, there is some drift of the base line, the cause of which is unknown. Since a determination requires only from 5 to 10 seconds, it is seldom that this drift introduces any appreciable error. Since the electric conductivity of blood varies with the h ...
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Autotransfusion

Autotransfusion is a process wherein a person receives their own blood for a transfusion, instead of banked allogenic (separate-donor) blood. There are two main kinds of autotransfusion: Blood can be autologously ""pre-donated"" (termed so despite ""donation"" not typically referring to giving to one's self) before a surgery, or alternatively, it can be collected during and after the surgery using an intraoperative blood salvage device (such as a Cell Saver or CATS). The latter form of autotransfusion is utilized in surgeries where there is expected a large volume blood loss - e.g. aneurysm, total joint replacement, and spinal surgeries.The first documented use of ""self-donated"" blood was in 1818, and interest in the practice continued until the Second World War, at which point blood supply became less of an issue due to the increased number of blood donors. Later, interest in the procedure returned with concerns about allogenic (separate-donor) transfusions. Autotransfusion is used in a number of orthopedic, trauma, and cardiac cases, amongst others. Where appropriate, it carries certain advantages - including the reduction of infection risk, and the provision of more functional cells not subjected to the significant storage durations common among banked allogenic (separate-donor) blood products.
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