recently
The Third People's Hospital of Shenzhen
Department of Emergency Medicine (Second Affiliated Hospital of Southern University of Science and Technology).
A 23-year-old patient, Ms. Su, was rescued.
Ms. Su suddenly choked when eating rice dumplings,
Fortunately, the husband next to him once saw the popular science of Heimlichfa,
Immediately help the wife to spit out part of the choked rice dumplings,
Then dialed 120.
Ten minutes after arriving at the hospital,
The emergency department team of Shenzhen Third Hospital
Combined respiratory endoscopy and OTOL
Successfully intubated Ms. Su's endohea,
Unblocks the airway and restores breathing.

Heimlich Law. Infographic
Choking on rice dumplings
Heimlich law emergency life
On October 21, Ms. Su, 23, was suddenly choked while eating rice dumplings. Because the rice dumplings blocked the airway, Ms. Su was unconscious due to lack of oxygen, and immediately fell to the ground, and a 2 cm opening appeared on her head. Ms. Su's husband, seeing his wife's full body cyanosis, immediately realized that his wife was blocked by rice dumplings and immediately used the Heimlik method to rescue her.
The Heimlich method is an emergency method that uses residual gas in the lungs to form an air stream to rush out foreign bodies, and is suitable for all asphyxia caused by foreign bodies in the airways. It was also Heimlik's law that saved Ms. Su's life - Peng Denggao, deputy chief physician of the Third People's Hospital of Shenzhen, introduced that once the human body is completely deprived of oxygen, about 4 to 5 minutes will cause irreversible serious damage to the brain. Without her husband's rescue behavior, Ms. Su would have a hard time surviving the arrival of emergency personnel.
However, due to the stickiness of the rice dumplings, Heimlikfa can only discharge part of it, Ms. Su is still short of breath, and her husband hastily dialed the 120 emergency number. During the period, because it was too uncomfortable, Ms. Su and her husband took turns to cut their throats with their hands, and cut Ms. Su's throat into a blur of blood and flesh.
Peng Denggao introduced that the throat mucosa is relatively fragile, and cutting the throat can easily lead to bleeding and edema of the patient's throat injury, which is not conducive to emergency personnel to detect airway foreign bodies. In this case, if the patient can still breathe on their own, they only need to wait for the ambulance to arrive.
Unblock the trachea after ten minutes of arriving at the hospital
CT shows diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage
When Ms. Su arrived at the Shenzhen Third Hospital, she was short of breath, cyanosis all over her body, her blood oxygen saturation was only 84% (the normal value was 95% to 100%), and her response was relatively sluggish, but she was still able to breathe spontaneously. Peng Denggao said this is because there is also a gap between the airway mucosa and the rice dumplings for a small amount of airflow to pass through.
"Without the Heimlik law, Ms. Su insisted that the first responders would not arrive. But if her husband did not dial 120 in time, as time passed, Ms. Su was likely to gradually edema due to foreign body compression lack of oxygen and bleeding, eventually causing the gap to completely disappear and suffocate. Peng Denggao said.
After Ms. Su arrived at the hospital, the emergency department immediately contacted the Department of Otolaryngology and the Respiratory Endoscopy Room to rescue her. At the beginning, the operation team was ready to perform a tracheosectomy for Ms. Su, but because the texture of the rice dumplings was soft and the laryngoscopic probe found that there was no large foreign body in the patient's airway, it was eventually changed to endotracheal intubation, and while cleaning up the foreign body, the operation team also sucked out about 200 ml of bloody secretions from Ms. Su's trachea. After the foreign body is removed, the condition gradually stabilizes.
From getting on the ambulance to the hospital, to Ms. Su's airway clear and breathing resumed, the whole process took only more than ten minutes.
The postoperative CT showed that Ms. Su had developed diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage – when a foreign body entered the airway, the airway was closed or squeezed, and the gas in the airway "had nowhere to go", which led to rupture of the capillaries in the lungs.
After that, Ms. Su was transferred to the ICU for follow-up treatment and was successfully discharged from the hospital on October 26.
Learn first aid and save lives at critical moments!
Comprehensive: Shenzhen Evening News, Shenzhen First Aid
Reporter Wang Yu Correspondent Shensanyuan
Source: Shenzhen News Network