1st Edition

Emergency Capnography

By Hugh Greenbaum Copyright 2025
    160 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    160 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    This portable and practical pocket guide explains how capnography works both physiologically and electronically and helps clinical staff to apply the tool promptly and correctly, and to interpret appropriately the numeric and graphic displays, providing vital information when viewed in the context of the patient’s clinical presentation, history, and other diagnostic data that will improve and enhance care.

     Early chapters explain how to interpret the data displayed in the context of various conditions, and how the care provider may respond to that data. Later chapters provide partial differential diagnoses based on the displayed capnometry data, an algorithm for interpreting waveforms, and clinical scenarios to illustrate the application of capnography in emergency medical practice.

     Ensuring that the value of capnography can be maximized to the benefit of patients, the book is an essential primer to capnography for those studying for and practising within the emergency medical services and a convenient reference for other emergency department personnel.

    Preface. 1. Basic capnography review. 2. Airway management. 3. Respiratory emergencies. 4. Cardiac emergencies. 5. Medical emergencies. 6. Shock. 7. Trauma. 8. Neurological emergencies. 9. Differential diagnosis: capnogram. 10. Differential diagnosis: capnometry. 11. Clinical Scenarios. 12. Study Question Answers

    Biography

    Hugh Greenbaum is an Emergency Medical Services (EMS) paramedic with Forest View Volunteer Rescue Squad, a 9-1-1 response agency in the USA State of Virginia, with more than 38 years of experience as a volunteer EMS provider. He is certified as an EMS Education Coordinator in Virginia and teaches Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) classes for his agency. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Information and Computer Science from the University of California, Irvine. He was a part-time faculty member at California State University, Fullerton in the Department of Computer Science, and retired from a 40-year career in systems and software engineering.