A patient develops anuria and begins having headaches, dyspnea, and vomiting. What can
be done to keep this patient from going into a coma or dying?
A. Administration of antibiotics C. Urgent surgery
B. Administration of anti-inflammatories D.Hemodialysis
D it the right answer
The first thing you might want to do is to place a Foley Catheter. Anuria may cause a septic shock. Then you start treating the other symptoms. A aspirine for headaches, maybe some fractional increased oxygen for the dyspnea. As for vomite, if patient doesn't answer to food, try a Nasogastric tube.
According to the severity of the patient's headaches, the presence of nausea or vomiting, the patient's response to the drug, and the presence of such comorbid conditions as depression or epilepsy.
Dyspnea that occurs when the patient is sitting up
children and adolescents may present with neurological symptoms such as headaches, vomiting, and problems with vision. The patient may also have symptoms of double vision.
It can cause spasms of the larynx that block the patient's airway and cause dyspnea
Is experiencing dyspnea
Hello, I see you are asking "What is paroxysmal sleep?" Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea (PND) is a sensation of shortness of breath that awakens the patient, often after 1 or 2 hours of sleep, and is usually relieved in the upright position. For more information, you can visit this URL - mentalhealthhelpcenter. com/condition/paroxysmal-sleep/c/31974
"The patient had anorexia, though he denied any nausea or vomiting," is a sentence with two verbs: "had" and "denied."
A patient is exhibiting the following symptoms: fever, cough, dyspnea, prominent gastrointestinal symptoms, and absence of buboes. Which form of plague is responsible?
septicemic
It is called transference.
mpo