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Q: How much adenosine to administer to an adult patient?
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8 If a medication contains 1 mgml how much of the medication would you give to administer 5 mg to the patient?

5ml


Can you deposit capsules in the rectum and is it effective?

Certain pharmaceuticals are recommended to be suppositories. An example is phenergan(spelling?) when the patient is vomiting too much to administer it orally.


What should the nurse do if she notices a residual gastric content of 50mL?

It depends on the patient. For an adult patient anything less than 200 ml is ok. However, for a patient such as a child, their feeding is much less. You should never have more residual than what the last feeding was. Consequently, in an adult, that would be OK, and you can continue with the next feeding.


How much glucola do you give an adult pregnant patient having a 1 hour gestational diabetes screen?

50g bottle of dextrose


What are molecules that supply much of the cell needed energy?

Adenosine triphosphate, or ATP.


How much time is required to administer 200ml of glucose iv solution?

40mn


Which phosphate bond is broken in ATP to cause a release of free energy?

The third one in the chain : A = Adenosine; Amp = Adenosine mono phosphate; Adp = Adenosine di phosphate; and Atp = Adenosine tri phosphate. Already at Adp there are lots of negatively charged oxygen atoms clustered, so to bring in another PO4-- makes it difficult to attach this last Pi and just as much energy is released when the bond is later 'broken'.


How do you treated a patient that has been giving too much insulin?

When to much insulin is administered, the treatment depends on how large the dose of insulin is and how low the patient's blood sugar is. For patients with minorly low to moderately low blood sugar, the easiest treatment is to administer oral glucose (glucose gell, glucose tablets, etc...) for severe cases, glucagon is administered. Glucagon is a chemical that makes the patient's liver release large amounts of glucose. In the most severe cases (eg. attempted suicide) intravenous glucose is given.


One of the principal compounds that living things use to store energy is?

It depends on how long the organism wants to store it. Fat is used for longer term; and ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate) is used for short term. ATP has 3 phosphates; after it is used, it drops a phosphate molecule, turning into ADP (Adenosine Diphosphate). However, ATP can only be used for so long as the body has so much of it; after ATP runs out there is the lag ("the wall"). However, fat is burned after that.


When you use the BVM how much air are you deliver to the patinet in one squeeze?

In the adult patient, the volume is 500 to 1000 cc's/ml The percentage is 95% without an advanced airway 100% with ETT, or combi.


Can Novocaine make you tired?

Depending on how much they administer novocaine may make you drowsy / tired.


How much does a patient advocate make?

A patient advocate's average salary is $34,811.