What are the respiratory and cardiac triads?

The exhale triad refers to Lobelin, Dimethylflorine Hydrochloride, and Niclosamide. The cardiac triad refers to atropine, lidocaine, and epinephrine.
Exhaled triple is used in patients with weak voluntary respiration to stimulate the respiratory center to achieve the effect of increasing the respiratory rate.
Lobelin is contraindicated in pregnant women, allergy. It may cause nausea, vomiting and other adverse reactions, overdose may cause tachycardia, respiratory depression, coma, death.
Dimethylflorine hydrochloride may cause nausea, vomiting, burning sensation of the skin, overdose may cause convulsions, convulsions.
Nicosamide may cause cerebral edema, tachycardia, arrhythmia, bronchial asthma, elevated blood pressure and other adverse reactions; it is contraindicated in pregnant and lactating women, those who are allergic to the drug, and children.
Cardiac triptans are commonly used in patients with cardiac arrest, and are used to increase the contractility of the heart muscle and maintain effective circulation.
Atropine may cause adverse reactions such as constipation, increased intraocular pressure, decreased sweating allergic rash. It is contraindicated in glaucoma, prostatic hypertrophy, and hyperthermia.
Lidocaine may cause adverse reactions such as nausea, dizziness, vomiting, rash, bradycardia, cardiac arrest; it is contraindicated in those who are allergic to the drug, those with severe hepatic insufficiency, patients with shock, and history of grand mal seizures.
Epinephrine may cause insomnia, dizziness, increased blood pressure, urinary retention, weakness, palpitations, corneal edema and other adverse reactions; Chlorpromazine, Phentolamine-induced hypotension, chloroform, cyclopropane anesthesia is contraindicated.
It is recommended to apply the above drugs under the guidance of a physician, not self-medication.