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1 s and civilian trauma victims with traumatic exsanguination.
2 CA for cardiac tamponade and 5 minutes after exsanguination.
3 a now do so as a result of causes other than exsanguination.
4 of cardiac tamponade (105 patients, 17.5%), exsanguination (418 patients, 69.6%), and exsanguination
5 later period, as did the rate of deaths from exsanguination (9% to 1%), multiple organ failure (12% t
7 s appear to be in reducing early deaths from exsanguination and late deaths from multiple organ failu
8 ar to those of today, rapidly preventing any exsanguination and the breakdown of osmoregulation of th
9 iac tamponade, 8 of 418 patients (1.9%) with exsanguination, and none of the 72 patients with combine
11 the 1980s in dog outcome models of prolonged exsanguination cardiac arrest has culminated in brain an
12 ation (EPR) of trauma victims who experience exsanguination cardiac arrest may allow survival from ot
14 have developed and used novel dog models of exsanguination cardiac arrest to explore suspended anima
16 ats showing no neurologic injury, despite an exsanguination cardiac arrest, followed by 20 mins of EP
17 f cold saline immediately after the start of exsanguination cardiac arrest-which rarely can be resusc
20 ), exsanguination (418 patients, 69.6%), and exsanguination combined with cardiac tamponade (72 patie
21 decreased to 40 mm Hg during 60 minutes with exsanguination from the 30th to the 60th minute to a mea
31 ontraumatic (e.g., ruptured aortic aneurysm) exsanguination, without severe brain trauma, by enabling