<span>Pacific i think is the answer to your question
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A client needs to be placed on strict intake and output (I&O) measurement. The nurse collects the data as a baseline and then checks the client's skin turgor by Pulling up and releasing the skin on the sternal area.
<h3>How do you test the turgor of the skin?</h3>
- By gently squeezing a skin fold between your thumb and fingers, you may determine the turgor of the skin.
- It is the typical condition of turgidity and tension in live cells, in particular: the fluid inside a plant cell stretching out the protoplasmic layer and cell wall.
- The skin you choose, whether it be on the belly, sternum, forearm, or below the collarbone, need to feel elastic, move freely, and swiftly revert to its initial position when released after a few seconds.
- Turgor was regarded as normal if it took less than two seconds for the skin to return to the hand and reduced if it took more than two seconds.
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Im pretty sure the answer is c if not then b
I believe the answer is: <span>. A. Islamic expansion into India was facilitated by both Islamic merchants and conquerors.
Cultural assimilation happened when both these merchants and conquerors conducted their business on foreign land.
For merchants, they spread muslim teachings through networking and building partnership with foreign people. As for conquerors, they usually legally require the people that they conquered to follow the empire's official muslim religion.</span>
Maturation is a threat to internal validity stemming from either long-term or short-term physiological changes occurring within the participants that may influence the dependent variable.
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What are physiological changes?</h3>
Ageing causes physiological changes in all organ systems. Arteriosclerosis develops, blood pressure rises, and cardiac output declines. Lung function is compromised, vital capacity is reduced, and expiratory flow rates are slowed.
Pregnancy causes a number of physiological changes in the mother, such as an increase in fat and total body water, a drop in plasma protein concentrations, particularly albumin, an increase in blood volume, cardiac output, and blood flow to the kidneys, and a decrease in blood pressure.
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