Has anyone worked on defibrillators? 

My slight reading on the subject has found widely differing limits.  
And the milli-amp spec is from the hand only.  Especially 
the right hand.  One reason why long ago, I was taught to work on 
tubes with one hand - if current was to pass through you from your 
hand to your feet, better that it's with the right hand than the 
left hand.  Current entering the left hand could cross the heart 
easier than the right. 

Direct contact with the heart muscle as in patient implanted 
defib devices require only micro-amps to work. 

A third condition, pulses, end up being another story altogether 
based on the amount of energy with I^2*t.  This allows for people 
to survive a higher level current spike in a transient state that 
would otherwise kill in a static state.  But, these spikes must be 
less time in duration than the period of a natural pulse in the 
heart muscle. 

Defibrillators work how?  
Certain number of pulses for a certain length of time? 
And there's more than one type of defibrillator then the 
capacitive, right? 

I have found very little on the subject and would be 
interested in sources. 

Thanks in advance. 

Doug

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