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Darya [45]
3 years ago
10

Seven factors that contribute to a healthy pregnancy

Medicine
1 answer:
Brut [27]3 years ago
8 0
1. Increase fruit intake
2. No drugs/Alcohol
3. Take vitamins (iron, Vitamin A,C,D,B6, etc.)
4. Reduce stress and blood pressure
5. Eat as healthy as possible
6. DRINK WATER
7. Fetal Monitoring
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Because Muscles that are inactive have a higher incidence of venous stasis.

Venous stasis can occur when the muscles of the extremities are inactive. Venous stasis is a risk factor in Virchow's triad.

<h3>What Is Venous Thromboembolism?</h3>

Venous thromboembolism (VTE), additionally called blood clots, is a sickness that consists of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. A deep vein thrombosis (DVT) takes place while a blood clot bureaucracy in a deep vein, typically withinside the decrease leg, thigh, or pelvis.

Your risk of developing VTE is highest after major surgery or serious injury, or when you have heart failure, cancer, or a heart attack. Swelling, redness, and pain are some of the symptoms of deep vein thrombosis. Pulmonary embolism can cause sudden chest pain and shortness of breath.

VTE sometimes occurs without any obvious signs. Medicines to help prevent more blood clots from forming or to clear up severe vein blockages are the mainstay of treatment for VTE.

To learn more about venous thromboembolism (VTE) from the given link

brainly.com/question/2870265

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professor190 [17]

Answer:

Kupffer cells, also known as stellate macrophages due to their particular structure while viewed under a microscope, were first identified by scientist Karl Wilhelm von Kupffer, after whom the cells were named, in 1876.

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These cells are part of the liver cells, and are found particularly on the walls of the sinusoids, where they perform their two most important tasks. First, these cells are part of the immune system, as they are essentially macrophages. However, their role is pretty unique, as they are responsible not just for phagocytosis of invading bacteria, and other pathogens, and initiating immune responses, but also, this cell plays a role in decomposing red blood cells who are dying, and taking up the hemoglobin from them to further break that into reusable globin, and the heme group, from which iron is further extracted to be re-used and also to create bilirrubin, a part of bile.

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