Answer:
The answer is Cardiogenic shock.
Explanation:
This is a 58-year-old patient, aware that she has acute chest pain and shortness of breath. She is very anxious and says she will die. The physical examination is cold, pale, sweaty and with a weak, rapid and irregular pulse. SOP: 90% .92 / 60. Crepites in both lung fields. It is a cardiogenic shock. Urgent handling.
Answer:
True
Explanation: Chest compressions are the same for both infants and adults it's a 30:2 (30 chest compressions):(2 rescue breaths) ratio
Yes and no.
Hair loss in cancer patients is typically caused by the cancer treatment, not the disease itself.
Chemotherapy, radiation, and other treatments commonly result in differing degrees of hair loss.
As the drugs destroy cancer cells, they also harm the hair follicles, leading to hair loss.
Short answer:
No, cancer does not cause it, the treatment does.