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Signs we are ALIVE Vital Signs.

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Presentation on theme: "Signs we are ALIVE Vital Signs."— Presentation transcript:

1 Signs we are ALIVE Vital Signs

2 What are Vital signs? Measures of the body’s most basic functions
Heart Rate Blood Pressure Temperature Respiration Rate These measures help assess the basic physiological state of the body – provides a baseline for comparison When they’re not zero = person alive

3 All vital signs can be … Observed, Measured, and Monitored
Normal ranges of vital signs change with AGE and MEDICAL CONDITIONS Our bodies are always trying to maintain HOMEOSTASIS – a constancy in the internal environment of the body, naturally maintained by adaptive responses that promote healthy survival. Ex: sweating to cool body temperature

4 Vital Signs Body Temperature Respiratory Rate Pulse / Heart Rate
Blood Pressure

5 Body Temperature The human body has an ideal temperature, and it works to maintain it, this is called: THERMOREGULATION Measurement: oral, axillary, tympanic, rectal

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8 Respiratory Rate Respiratory System delivers oxygen to the body’s tissues & eliminates carbon dioxide. Major muscle of ventilation: diaphragm Measured in “breaths per minute” Adults: 12 – 20 bpm Children: 20 – 30 bpm Newborns: 30 – 60 bpm

9 Other factors affecting respiration
Pain, anxiety, exercise Trauma, infection, medication Respiratory and cardiovascular disease Alteration in fluid, electrolyte and Acid-base balances Increase in blood CO2 is most powerful respiratory stimulant

10 Measuring respiration rate
Through observation – one full inspiration and expiration (don’t tell them when you’re counting) Normal adult bpm Tachypnea = respiration >20 bpm Bradypnea = respiration < 10 bpm Apnea = absence of breathing Dyspnea = difficulty breathing

11 Pulse Oximeter Measures oxygen level in blood
Normal PulseOximeter = 95% to 100%

12 Pulse Pulse rate: Adult = 60 to 100 beats per minute
Children under 10 = 70 to 120 beats per minute Tachycardia – rapid pulse (>100 bpm) Bradycardia- low pulse (<60 bpm)

13 Factors contributing to increased pulse rate
Pain, fever, stress, exercise Bleeding, decrease in BP, some medications like adrenalin (epi-pen) Factors contributing to decreased pulse rate Age, rest, thin body size some medications like Beta-blockers (also help lower BP)

14 Blood Pressure Measure of the force exerted by blood on the arterial walls during contraction & relaxation. Measured pressure when the heart is relaxed: Diastolic Measured pressure when the heart is contracted: Systolic Measured with a Sphygmomanometer

15 Blood Pressure cont’d Recorded in millimeters of mercury
(mm Hg) with systolic over diastolic Normal adult systolic: mm Hg Normal adult diastolic: mm Hg Hypertension = high blood pressure (age, obesity, exercise, emotions, food intake, Hypotension = low blood pressure

16 Blood Pressure Systolic pressure = 95-140 mmHg
Diastolic pressure = mmHg 120/ 80 Normal


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