<span>Since you are missing the options, I'm going to enumerate some possible answers:
- </span><span>memory loss
</span><span>- Wandering
</span><span>- Unpredictable behavior
</span><span>- inability to process visual sensory information
</span><span>- less concentration and attention
- Delusions and hallucinations
- Dysphasia
- Apraxia (can't make certain motor movements)
- loss of </span><span><span>Orientation</span>
- loss of language
</span>
Any physical characteristic can be passed on from generation to generation. However, some characteristics are influenced by the environment as well as having a genetic predisposition for that specific trait.
Answer:
When animals eat their food combine with oxygen, which produces energy for the animals to use for everyday activity and then gives off carbon. The carbon then combines with the oxygen to form carbon dioxide, which is then released back into the atmosphere as waste product when the animals breath.
Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
Hope this helps ;)
Deficient Fluid Volume is the nursing diagnosis that is most likely to apply to a patient who has a dysfunction of the posterior lobe of the pituitary gland.
The posterior pituitary produces ADH; disruptions in the levels of ADH upset the body's normal fluid balance. The hormones produced by the posterior pituitary do not directly affect immune function, tissue perfusion, or body temp.
Deficient fluid volume, or hypovolemia, results from a loss of body fluid or fluid shift, causing the fluid output to surpass fluid intake. In this process (acute or chronic), the body loses fluid volume and electrolytes. The source for this condition can be gastrointestinal, renal, or even metabolic.
Symptoms:
- Expresses feeling thirsty
- Verbalizes feelings of weakness
- States feeling dizzy/lightheaded, especially when changing position
- Complains about an inability to focus
- Complains of headaches
- Describes feeling of fast heartbeat
Learn more about Deficient Fluid Volume here : brainly.com/question/27960784
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