subject
Physics, 02.05.2021 21:10 walmartislife

**PLEASE HELP ASAP** (ill give brainliest to answer)!!!

1. Your 15-year-old daughter, Fatamorgana, has been ill for 3 days with a fever, lassitude, anorexia, sore anus and elbows, and frequent diarrhea. She has gone through a big bottle of Tums in the last 2 days. You’ve heard of “antacid abuse,” and wonder if you should take the Tums away from her. Do you?

A. Yes! She is giving herself a case of respiratory acidosis.

B. Yes! She surely has given herself a case of metabolic alkalosis by now.

C. No! She is probably doing the right thing here, and took her advice from a physiology textbook instead of a popular magazine, or Dr. Oz.

D. No! But she also needs some acidity, for acid-base balance, so you have her drink a 2 cups of all-natural apple cider vinegar you got from the health aisle of the local grocery store.

2. You do take the Tums away from Fatamorgana, just to see if she gets better. Later that day, you find her lying on the bathroom floor, exhausted by toilet effort and her overall lack of calories. You notice her breathing is strange. What is this breathing like, and what do you do about it? (ASSUMING no other medical care is available – there has been an ice storm, say.)

A. She is inhaling only every 15 seconds, and you feed her some non-diet Coca-Cola in a cup because she is too weak to raise her head to drink.

B. Although not seeming in distress or turning funny colors in the face, she is breathing so infrequently that you call an ambulance.

C. She is breathing very rapidly. You give her a liter of bottled water, make her a big glass of Alka-Seltzer, and give her an emetic.

D. She has Kussmaul respirations so you have her breathe into a paper bag.

3. Normal lab values should be second nature to you. You are reading an issue of the NEJM. The patient being discussed has a bicarb of 22, CO2 33, and pH 7.66. What is the term for this combination of numbers?

A. respiratory acidosis B. respiratory alkalosis C. metabolic acidosis D. metabolic alkalosis

4. For the NEJM case in Question #3, the cause of the low-ish bicarb value is:

A. probably ingested a lot of it B. either diarrhea or vomiting

C. respiratory compensation D. renal compensation E. bad kidneys

5. Your great aunt in the nursing home acquired a nosocomial cystitis, which then became nephritis. What are a likely pH & bicarb her, respectively?

A. low & high B. high & low C. low & low D. high & high

6. Miss Holly Golightly of Myrtle Beach drives to her mountain cabin in Blowing rock, NC, to try to recuperate from her new-onset panic attacks. Soon after arriving, she sees a large rattlesnake in the kitchen sink, runs away, and snaps her ankle (fibula).
How many causes of pH shift are mentioned in this scenario?

A. 1 B. 2 C. 3 D. 4 E. 5 F. 6

7. Can all three arrows in an acid-base disorder be pointing in the same direction?

A. Yes, if it’s respiratory

B. Yes, if it’s metabolic

C. No, this would be extremely unusual, medically speaking

D. No, the renal and respiratory compensations we learned about will prevent this

8. Which of these will have a CO2 level that is a result of compensation, instead of being a cause of the pH problem in the first place?

A. drinking vinegar B. has pneumonia C. heart attack D. running a mile

9. When the value for CO2, or bicarb, in a patient, is definitely high, or definitely low, it must always be treated.

A. True, that’s what made them ill in the first place

B. False, it may actually be helping the patient from being even more ill

10. When the CO2 and pH arrows are in opposite directions, the situation is always (practically speaking) a respiratory alkalosis or acidosis. A. True B. False

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Physics

question
Physics, 22.06.2019 00:20
You have been consulted by the mobile phone company hookup about a new augmented reality product called “brows”. they want to develop an alternative to google glasses, which, you recall, is a proposed new product which plans to superimpose a whole range of wireless google services over the user’s ordinary vision of the world. these appear in little circles and ovals, and let you phone people, take photographs, navigate across cities and inside buildings, find shops and update your social media. brows would do this too, but not be limited to special google services. the user would wear a small cylinder-shaped device designed to fit on top of their existing eyewear (glasses or sunglasses). it would project a reversed image onto the inside of the lenses, the reflection of which would be in focus for the user. instead of voice control, the user would control the device by eye and neck movements, which the device would track. the device would connect via bluetooth to the user’s phone, which would supply most of the computing power and wireless connectivity. hookup also wants to know what existing services would be most in demand, and which would not work well with brows. using your knowledge of augmented reality, wearable technology and interface design, is the project feasible? if not, why not? if feasible, how could the product need to be modified for a better experience?
Answers: 2
question
Physics, 22.06.2019 03:00
Dinate system, and a charge q = - 2.00 nc is placed s2 10 n> c. (a) what is the change in electric potential energy when the dipole moment of a molecule changes its orientation with respect to es from parallel to perpendicular? (b) at what absolute temperature t is the average translational kinetic energy 32 kt of a molecule equal to the change in potential energy calculated in part(: abovethistemperature,thermalagitationprevents the dipoles from aligning with the electric field.) placed in a uniform electric field e with magnitude 1.6 * 6 on the positive x-axis at x = 4.00 cm. (a) if a third charge q3 = +6.00 nc is now placed at the point x = 4.00 cm, y = 3.00 cm, find the x- and y-components of the total force exerted on this charge by the other two. (b) find the magnitude and direction of figure p21.62 ll uu 21.55 . torque on a dipole. an electric dipole with dipole moment ps is in a uniform external electric field es. (a) find the orientations of the dipole for which the torque on the dipole is zero. (b) which of the orientations in part (a) is stable, and which is unstable? (hint: consider a small rotation away from the equi- librium position and see what happens.) (c) show that for the stable orientation in part (b), the dipole’s own electric field tends to oppose the external field. 21.62 ..
Answers: 1
question
Physics, 22.06.2019 05:30
Choose the most likely outcome of this scenario: jen decided to go bike riding without a helmet. while no one is around during her ride, she is thrown from her bike when her wheel goes into a pothole. she is not injured, but she is terrified to get back on her bike. what happens next? a. her physical health is affected even though she wasn't hurt. b. her mental and emotional health are affected because she is afraid to get back on her bike. c. her social health is affected because she is worried her friends saw the fall. d. her overall health is not affected at all by her fall.
Answers: 1
question
Physics, 22.06.2019 15:30
What are the necessary conditions for fusion?
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
**PLEASE HELP ASAP** (ill give brainliest to answer)!!!

1. Your 15-year-old daughter,...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 04.07.2019 18:30
Questions on the website: 13722367