Answer:
Malignant hyperthermia
Explanation:
Malignant hyperthermia is a syndrome of genetic origin, where susceptible individuals, when exposed to certain anesthetics (especially inhalers) develop a hypermetabolic condition characterized by increased muscle temperature faster than core temperature. Failure to treat the symptoms immediately can result in death. It was first described in Australia in the year 1960 by Denborough and Lowell, later other cases were described in Wisconsin and Toronto.
Malignant hyperthermia occurs in most cases due to mutation of a calcium channel of skeletal muscles. This mutation may result in exacerbated calcium release in the muscle when some anesthetics are present. This can result in the destruction of skeletal muscle fiber. As there is a high energy consumption, increased CO2 production and rapid increase in body temperature, with biochemical and hematological consequences, there may also be the evolution to irreversible shock and cardiovascular collapse.
Since you are the person who made the statement, I suppose that I am needing to give you two practical pieces of advice... Here it goes....
1. Don't wait for opportunity to knock. Get up. Chase it down. And tackle it.
2. They say that "when God closes a door, He opens a window". When He opens that figurative window, however, some people are still worried about how they can pick the lock to get the figurative door open. Don't be that person.
I hope that this is good advice!
-Alleah77
Jordan works in a hematology lab and received a blood report showing 22,000 white blood cells per cubic millimeter of blood for a patient. he determines this patient has leukocytosis.