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<h2>Question ❓Which symptoms are characteristic of a preschool-age client who is diagnosed with a urinary tract infection</h2>
<h2>Answer ❄️: </h2>
Pediatric Urinary Tract Infection
<h2>Explanation:⁉️</h2>
Practice Essentials
Urinary tract infection (UTI) is one of the most common pediatric infections. It distresses the child, concerns the parents, and may cause permanent kidney damage. Occurrences of a first-time symptomatic UTI are highest in boys and girls during the first year of life and markedly decrease after that.
Febrile infants younger than 2 months constitute an important subset of children who may present with fever without a localizing source. The workup of fever in these infants should always include evaluation for UTI. The chart below details a treatment approach for febrile infants younger than 3 months who have a temperature higher than 38°C.
Answer:
The correct answer is C.
Explanation:
Blood enters the heart through the superior vena cava and the inferior vena cava into the right atrium. When the right atrium contracts, this poor oxygen blood flows to the right ventricle through the tricuspid valve. The valve then closes and the right ventricle contracts ejecting blood through the pulmonary trunk and pulmonary arteries to the lungs to be oxygenated.
Pulmonary veins carry oxygen-rich blood from the lungs into the left atrium. Then the atrium contracts and blood flows from your left atrium into your left ventricle through the mitral valve. The valve then closes, the left ventricle contracts and blood leaves the heart through the aortic valve, into the aorta and to the body.
All of the above u believe