A ask give or take a few losing blood and dieing?
When you ask for medical advice in these sections, other take into consideration who is answering your question before you filch any of that advice to heart.
e are some people on here with categorically no medical experience or expertise answering questions as if they actually have something to submit.
In answer to your question, when you are pronounced dead by a doctor, no matter what the principle, that doctor has decided that no further course of action is going to restore any sort of trait of life. The moment that this occurs all resuscitative pains are stopped. That means, that if you lost a lot of blood and died, that at the point where your brain and other key organs have been deprived of oxygen for too long to benefit from any further transfusions or medications, you are properly considered dead.
The only reason to ever shock a heart is the presence of an out of the ordinary heart rhythm called ventricular fibrillation or tachycardia. This rhythm is very rare within the instance of an acute blood loss. The most common rhythm in the instance of an acute blood loss is asystole or bradycardia or tachycardia. We do not ever shock those rhythms.
If your dead, your unconscious. If EMS arrives onto a scene and finds you pulseless and laying in a pool of blood, you will be called DRT-which is EMS slang for "Dead Right There" and you will not be transported to the hospital and no further deed will be taken to resuscitate you. The reason, because you are dead. Source(s): 18 years of ER Nursing including Trauma Suites where we in fact work on trauma patients. I am not a 23 year old student who speaks five languages and has no medical experience but insists on answering medical question and giving medical advice.
Maybe, but you would probably have serious damage to your brain and other organs. When you die of blood loss, it's like (as far as your body is concerned) as dying of suffocation.
real problem would be getting blood back into the body, since the heart isn't pumping to move it into the body. IVs usually work by your own blood circulation pulling the fluid in.
The doctor would also own to fix whatever caused the blood loss in the first place, which can be pretty firm.
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