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@fretonic
A helpful guide to those who need a refresher.
When your little sister discovers and sends you the classic science nerd posts
Just manipulate it.
Subdural Haematoma
This usually occurs as the result of trauma and in such a situation is referred to as âacute subdural haematomaâ. It is the deadliest of all head injuries.
Brain injury occurs because blood filling the area increases pressure and exerts enough force upon the brain to begin damaging the tissue. Hopefully it can be drained before this happens but more often than not, that isnât the case.
Less frequently (and particularly in the elderly) they may occur after a very small head injury and persist unnoticed for weeks - this is the chronic presentation of subdural haematoma.
Symptoms are that of typical neurological impairment, including impairments of vision, speech and balance, headache, confusion, seizure, loss of consciousness and nausea.
In the majority of studies reviewed, adult patients in OHCA ventilated with a BVM alone were more likely to survive to discharge than adults patients ventilated with an advanced airway.
âEvidence has become available demonstrating that providing high-quality CPRâas measured by maintaining a high compression fraction, satisfactory compression depth, appropriate compression rate, and limiting peri-shock pausesâis essential to optimizing survival with good neurological outcome. Nonetheless, growing evidence suggests an additional association with optimizing survival, namely the choice of airway used during resuscitation.â
I actually really like this.
Life on Earth likely started 4.1 billion years ago, much earlier than scientists thought
UCLA geochemists have found evidence that life likely existed on Earth at least 4.1 billion years ago â 300 million years earlier than previous research suggested. The discovery indicates that life may have begun shortly after the planet formed 4.54 billion years ago.
âTwenty years ago, this would have been heretical; finding evidence of life 3.8 billion years ago was shocking,â said Mark Harrison, co-author of the research and a professor of geochemistry at UCLA.
âLife on Earth may have started almost instantaneously,â added Harrison, a member of the National Academy of Sciences. âWith the right ingredients, life seems to form very quickly.â
The new research suggests that life existed prior to the massive bombardment of the inner solar system that formed the moonâs large craters 3.9 billion years ago.
âIf all life on Earth died during this bombardment, which some scientists have argued, then life must have restarted quickly,â said Patrick Boehnke, a co-author of the research and a graduate student in Harrisonâs laboratory.
Scientists had long believed the Earth was dry and desolate during that time period. Harrisonâs research â including a 2008 study in Nature he co-authored with Craig Manning, a professor of geology and geochemistry at UCLA, and former UCLA graduate student Michelle Hopkins â is proving otherwise.
âThe early Earth certainly wasnât a hellish, dry, boiling planet; we see absolutely no evidence for that,â Harrison said. âThe planet was probably much more like it is today than previously thought.â
The researchers, led by Elizabeth Bell â a postdoctoral scholar in Harrisonâs laboratory â studied more than 10,000 zircons originally formed from molten rocks, or magmas, from Western Australia. Zircons are heavy, durable minerals related to the synthetic cubic zirconium used for imitation diamonds. They capture and preserve their immediate environment, meaning they can serve as time capsules.
The research is published today in the online early edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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