To prevent dehydration or over-hydration
your fluid intake should be 1/4 more than your fluid out put
Intake and output measurement is important in healthcare to monitor a patient's fluid balance. It helps healthcare providers assess hydration status, kidney function, and overall health. Monitoring intake and output can also detect early signs of fluid imbalances or underlying health issues.
A "fluid balance" chart is also known as an "I/O" chart for intake and output. An I/O is the record a nurse or nursing staff writes, giving the intake and output of fluids in ml/cc's. The I/O includes what is taken in through IVs, gastric lavages, catheter flushes, as well as orally or rectally (such as during an enema). "Return" after an enema, amounts from drainage or returns from flushes, and urinary output create the totals for "output".
Diuresis is the medical term meaning liquid output exceeds intake.
There are many things that affect an animal's urine output such as food intake. Beverage intake also affects an animal's urine output.
A person with cholelithiasis will need to be monitored to ensure they are not having further problems. Documenting intake and output is one such monitor.
Intake is the amount of fluids someone takes in and output is how much urine they excreted. It's used to monitor fluid balance.
The results of formulas that you type in are outputs in Excel. If you do filters, the results you get are outputs. Charts are an output. If you print anything from Excel, that is an output.
Flow charts are graphical representations of processes, showing the sequence of steps and decision points. Output sequences are the results or information produced by a process. By mapping out the steps and decisions in a flow chart, you can visualize the flow of work or data and understand how the output sequences are generated.
If urine output is greater than intake a pressure differential will exist between inside and outside the urethra and as a result you will urinate your internal organs out.
no
Determines patients current volume