Asystole in a sentence as a noun

The third aspect is the time span from asystole to the halting of information loss.

VFib does not "frequently" become asystole after a few seconds.

"...asystole frequently occurs..."vs."VFib can persist..."How are these incompatible?

If VF continues for anything longer than a few seconds, asystole frequently occurs.

> If VF continues for anything longer than a few seconds, asystole frequently occurs.

On the other hand, taking the watch off results in no signal input which is different than what you would see on the monitor for asystole.

Among other things, asystole is definitive of "clinical death.

I'm not really sure of the details of the limits of dealing with asystole in a hospital setting, but I suspect in an OR they have some extra options vs. other places.

Furthermore, defibrillators aren't applied to an asystole heart.

The arrhythmia can persist for several minutes, but if it persists for more than a few seconds it will likely eventually generate into asystole without medical intervention.

"In medicine, asystole, colloquially known as flatline, is a state of no cardiac electrical activity, hence no contractions of the myocardium and no cardiac output or blood flow.

Patient has an unknown downtime, is cool centrally, has visible lividity, or early stages of rigor, then I'm just going to hook up an EKG to confirm asystole, call my dispatcher for an official timestamp, and hand the scene over to the police.

Asystole definitions

noun

absence of systole; failure of the ventricles of the heart to contract (usually caused by ventricular fibrillation) with consequent absence of the heart beat leading to oxygen lack and eventually to death