No, sepsis and septic shock are not the same thing. Sepsis is a life-threatening condition that arises when the body's response to an infection causes widespread inflammation and organ dysfunction. Septic shock is a severe subset of sepsis characterized by a significant drop in blood pressure and inadequate blood flow to the organs, even in the presence of fluid resuscitation. Essentially, septic shock is a more critical stage of sepsis.
toxic shock syndrome is in your vagina, it happens when new bacteria or yeast are introduced and then rapidly reproduce within the vagina. The vagina can't fight the bacteria (using acidity). sepsis is when your intestines rupture and leak into your body. obviously TSK is cooler.
Sepsis or SIRS (Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome) are other common names for the presence of pathogens in the bloodstream that cause systemic (whole body) symptoms of infection (septicemia), sometimes also referred to as being "septic". Depending on the severity and symptoms, it can also be called severe sepsis or septic shock. Bacteremia is presence of bacteria in the blood, but does not mean the same as septicemia since it is usually transient and usually clears from the action of the body's own immune system. Bacteremia does not indicate a systemic reaction or infection. A common lay term used is "blood poisoning".
No.
No
the gurgling noise in septic tanks comes from the same thing the gurgling in your stomach comes from: just the fluids and chemicals being churned around
Yes - The shock is an intigrated part of the strut.
No, sepsis and MRSA are not the same. Sepsis is a life-threatening condition that arises when the body's response to infection leads to widespread inflammation and organ dysfunction. MRSA, or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, is a specific type of bacteria that is resistant to certain antibiotics and can cause infections, including those that may lead to sepsis. While MRSA can cause sepsis, they refer to different aspects of infection and disease.
Volume remains the sameTank (vessels) expandsHigh space shock goes by other names you may be familiar with, such as relative hypovolemia or distributive shock. In this form of shock, the fluid volume remains the same, but the vessels dilate causing poor perfusion and hypotension. Fluid can also shift from intracellular to extracellular space. This can be seen in neuogenic shock (spinal shock) where vessels lose sympathetic tone (which causes vasoconstriction), anaphylaxis, or sepsis. All of these forms of shock show hypotension that should be initially managed with fluid, but it is not due to true hypovolemia.
Penicillin was the first miracle drug to cure the patient with sepsis in 1941. Florey and Chain treated the the patient with sepsis. The patient started to improve. But died eventually as the stock of penicillin got exhausted. But the result was encouraging. Penicillin was used and cured the patients of sepsis in the same year.
A septic system is essentially a miniature sewage system. It does all the same things, just on a smaller scale.
They both have the same job, the only thing difference is their application. The "shock" dampens continued vibrations from the springs while the "stabilizer" dampens the "shimmy" that the front tires cause.
Anti-shock and anti-skip are the same thing. The music is loaded into memory so if the disc skips it can continue playing.