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Heimlich maneuver
An emergency treatment for obstruction of the airway in adults. It may be needed when someone chokes on a piece of food that has "gone down the wrong way." To perform the Heimlich maneuver, stand behind the victim, wrap your arms around their waist, makes a fist with one hand and holds the fist with the thumb side just below the breast bone. Place your other hand over this first and use it to pull sharply into the top of the choking person’s stomach and forcefully presses up into the victim's diaphragm to expel the obstruction (most commonly food). Repeat as necessary. In the early 1970s the American surgeon Henry Heimlich noted that food and other objects that caused choking by blocking the airway from the mouth to the lungs were not expelled by giving sharp blows to the back. In 1974 he devised a new method that he tested on laboratory dogs. The new manual thrust method — the "Heimlich maneuver" — is now in standard use. If the Heimlich maneuver is unsuccessful, an emergency tracheostomy may be needed to prevent suffocation.

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Heim·lich maneuver .hīm-lik- n the manual application of sudden upward pressure on the upper abdomen of a choking victim to force a foreign object from the trachea
Heimlich Henry Jay (b 1920)
American surgeon. Heimlich wrote a number of medical works for the layman, on such topics as surgery of the stomach, duodenum, and diaphragm and on postoperative care for thoracic surgery. He devised an operation for the replacement of the esophagus and developed the Heimlich maneuver, publishing a monograph on it in 1976.

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Heim·lich maneuver (hīmґlik) [Henry Jay Heimlich, American surgeon, born 1920] see under maneuver.

Medical dictionary. 2011.