Stress is inevitable part of life so one should be able to manage it to be able to stay healthy. General Adaptation Syndrome has 3 stages that can help one understand the different stages the body undergoes when in stress. There is the Alarm Reaction stage which is the fight and flight, the Resistance stage in which symptoms like Irritability leading to fatigue and the Exhaustion stage which includes anxiety and depression
A) Let myself feel sad and then find ways to move on
Answer:
A. a synthetic version of the hormone testosterone
Explanation:
According to www.drugabuse.gov, ""Anabolic" refers to muscle building, and "androgenic" refers to increased male sex characteristics."
When on the synthetic version of testosterone, the body gains a lot of muscle mass. A good way to see the changes brought on by testosterone are looking at before and after photos of FtM patients.
What is the difference between formal and informal language?
Formal and informal language serve different purposes. The tone, the choice of words and the way the words are put together vary between the two styles. Formal language is less personal than informal language. It is used when writing for professional or academic purposes like university assignments. Formal language does not use colloquialisms, contractions or first person pronouns such as ‘I’ or ‘We’.
Informal language is more casual and spontaneous.
Primary intention- wound healing with skin edges that are approximated, risk of infection is low, healing occurs quickly with minimal scar formation as long as infection and secondary breakdown is prevented (similar to a surgical wound)
Most common = Acute wounds; minimal tissue loss = surgical wounds and superficial partial thickness (abrasions/blisters)
Secondary Intention This type of healing is in wounds with extensive tissue loss/infection & wounds in which the edges cannot be approximated (closed). Would is left open and granulation tissue gradually fills in the deficit. Susceptible to infection. Wet to dry dressings. Ex: Pressure Ulcer Associated w/ pathology = diabetes, ischemia, pressure damage in inflammation (Neuropathic, arterial, venous, full thickness, chronic inflammation) Require ongoing wound care - larger scares