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Answer: <u>
Inhalants</u></h2><h2><em>
What They Are:
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<em>Inhalants are things that are breathed in to give the user an immediate rush, or high. They include glues, paint thinners, dry cleaning fluids, gasoline, felt-tip marker fluid, hair spray, deodorants, spray paint, and whipped cream dispensers (whippets).
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Sometimes Called:
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<em>whippets, poppers, snappers, rush, bolt, bullet
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How They're Used:
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<em>These are inhaled directly from the container (called sniffing or snorting), from a plastic bag (called bagging), or by holding an inhalant-soaked rag in the mouth (called huffing).
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What They Do:
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<em>Inhalants produce a quick feeling of being drunk — followed by sleepiness, staggering, dizziness, and confusion. Long-time users get headaches, nosebleeds, and sometimes lose their sense of smell. Inhalants decrease oxygen to the brain and can cause brain damage.
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<em>Using an inhalant just one time can lead to life-threatening health problems, and even cause death.</em>
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hope it helps you!!</em></u></h2>
Answer:
Tubular reabsorption
Explanation:
What it does is that it moves the solutes and water out of the filtrate and back into the bloodstream. This is where all of the nutrients is being moved out of the filtrate and into your body hence why you are healthy.
Hope this helped :)
A patient who suffers from asthma and has developed reddened and blistered skin, this condition would be known as eczema.
Check their pulse on the neck with 2 fingers to see if they’re unresponsive if they are not call the police and start chest compressions
Answer:
The tendon connects the bone to the muscle.
Explanation: