Advanced life supportAdvanced Life Support (ALS) is a set of life saving protocols and skills that extend basic life support to further support the circulation and provide an open airway and adequate ventilation (breathing).
Head tilt/Chin liftThe head-tilt/chin-lift is a procedure used to prevent the tongue obstructing the upper airways. The maneuver is performed by tilting the head backwards in unconscious patients, often by applying pressure to the forehead and the chin. The maneuver is used in any patient in whom cervical spine injury is not a concern and is taught on most first aid courses as the standard way of clearing an airway. This maneuver and the jaw-thrust maneuver are two of the main tools of basic airway management.
Basic airway managementBasic airway management are a set of medical procedures performed in order to prevent airway obstruction and thus ensuring an open pathway between a patient's lungs and the outside world. This is accomplished by clearing or preventing obstructions of airways, often referred to as choking, cause by the tongue, the airways themselves, foreign bodies or materials from the body itself, such as blood or aspiration. Contrary to advanced airway management, minimal-invasive techniques does not rely on the use of medical equipment and can be performed without or with little training.
Jaw-thrust maneuverThe jaw-thrust maneuver is a first aid and medical procedure used to prevent the tongue from obstructing the upper airways. This maneuver and the head-tilt/chin-lift maneuver are two of the main tools of basic airway management, and they are often used in conjunction with other basic airway techniques including bag-valve-mask ventilation. The jaw-thrust maneuver is often used on patients with cervical neck problems or suspected cervical spine injury. The maneuver is used on a supine patient.
Position latérale de sécuritévignette|Manœuvre exécutée par trois secouristes: Au commandement de « Attention pour tourner... Tournez ! », les secouristes tournent le patient au même rythme de façon à assurer l'alignement de la colonne vertébrale.Position latérale de sécurité: La bouche est tournée vers le bas de façon que le patient ne risque pas d'étouffer dans les fluides corporels ; la tête est en bascule prudente afin de maintenir l'épiglotte ouverte. Les bras et les jambes forment des béquilles de façon à stabiliser la position.
Libération des voies aériennesLes voies aériennes peuvent être obstruées accidentellement, gênant ou empêchant le passage de l'air. Il faut alors libérer le passage de l'air, « assurer la perméabilité des voies aériennes supérieures », pour permettre la ventilation spontanée ou la ventilation artificielle. C'est la libération des voies aériennes (LVA). On parle aussi de contrôle des voies aériennes.
ÉtouffementChoking, also known as foreign body airway obstruction (FBAO), is a phenomenon that occurs when breathing is impeded by a blockage inside of the respiratory tract. An obstruction that prevents oxygen from entering the lungs results in oxygen deprivation. Although oxygen stored in the blood and lungs can keep a person alive for several minutes after breathing stops, choking often leads to death. Over 4,000 choking-related deaths occur in the United States every year.
Airway obstructionAirway obstruction is a blockage of respiration in the airway that hinders the free flow of air. It can be broadly classified into being either in the upper airway (UPA) or lower airway (LOA). Airway obstruction is a life-threatening condition and requires urgent attention, and assistance when it is needed. The assistance to clear an upper airway obstruction would begin employing first-aid anti-choking techniques.