Yes. If the baby is at rest. Not if it is playing or excited.
its in COPD patient .
Yes, it is too fast.
the answer is 20
On average, men take about 12-20 breaths per minute at rest. Assuming an average of 15 breaths per minute, this would equate to roughly 21,000 breaths per day. Over a lifetime of around 80 years, this would amount to approximately 609 million breaths.
The normal respiratory rate for a teen, like adults, would probably be between 14-20 breaths per minute.
30 compressions for one minute then a breath so it would be 2 breaths and 60 compressions
Not necessarily. A cat can breathe and purr quite comfortably at that rate. However, if the cat appears uncomfortable, is breathing with its mouth open, has gums that are not pink, or otherwise appears to be in distress, medical attention would be wise.
The average resting respiratory rate is 15-16 breaths per minute. Therefore, there would be 15-16 inhalations and 15-16 exhalations per minute.
The average respiratory rate for adults is 10 to 14 breaths per minute. Taking this average, the number of breaths in an hour would be 600 to 840 per hour.
A horse should take between 8 and 16 breaths per minute. Obviously a larger horse would take closer to 8 breaths and a smaller horse or pony may take up to 16.
the normal range for rispiratory rate is from 15 to 20 breathes in 15 seconds. then the numbers fo breathes is multiplied by 4 to get the nukber of breathes in a minute. *******************WRONG****************** this would be one breath every second. too much! The ranges for rates of normal respiration are as follows: ________________________ ADULT= 12-20 breaths/minute CHILD= 15-30 breaths/minute INFANT=25-50 breaths/minute ________________________ R. Griffith, FF/EMT-B, Paramedic Student
No(Not in Canada per the Red Cross courses, anyway)For an 'average' rescuer, you should be doing 30 compressions to 2 breaths, Approx 2.5 times per minute. This would argue for 2 breaths every 24 sec or so.For advanced rescue, even doing only breaths, the max would be 1 breath every 5-6 sec.
I have a helathy 5 month old. I just counted respirations at 42 per minute while asleep. Average for an infant I believe is 30-50. Any higher and I would look for signs of distress like fever, illness, retractions (caving in) to the abdomen or chest while breathing. Any of those and the child's pediatrician should be called or if the child is in severe distress or becoming blue around the lips he/she should go to the nearest ER or better yet, call 911. A respiratory emergency is actually a legitimate reason to call EMS.
The average exchange of air per breath is 500 ml for men and 390 mL for women and the average breathing rate is about 12 times per minute. That's about 6 litres a minute, 0.360 m3/hr for men and 4 litres a minute, 0.240 m3/hr for women.The average respiratory rate varies by by age:Newborns: 44 breaths per minuteInfants: 20-40 breaths per minutePreschool children: 20-30 breaths per minuteOlder children: 16-25 breaths per minuteAdults: 12-20 breaths per minuteAdults during strenuous exercise 35-45 breaths per minuteAthletes' peak 60-70 breaths per minuteAs a consequence the actual tidal respiration volume for any individual would have to be calculated.Answer:A person breathes about 100 litres (0.1 m3) of air every hour.