Answer:
start mixing other things with the sunflower seeds. then, slowly start to feed him other things. or, you could feed him other things and (kind of) force him to eat other things. (yes, its cruel but they need to eat) but I would advise to try not to feed him so much of the same thing so much, its unhealthy for them.
Explanation:
Teens’ use of most illegal drugs is down—way down—except for marijuana (which is the most common drug taken in the US by teens), which is staying about the same. However, teens are vaping more often than before, and their use of inhalants has increased slightly.
Those are some of the findings from the latest Monitoring the Future survey. More than 43,700 students in 8th, 10th, and 12th grades (from 360 schools across the United States) took the survey in 2017. Here are some of the things we learned from them.
The good news is overall, teens’ use of illegal drugs (other than marijuana and inhalants) continues to decrease. It’s now the lowest in the history of the survey in all three grades. That’s excellent!
Answer:
The correct pathway for oxygen-poor blood is right atrium → right ventricle → pulmonary artery → lungs (first option).
Explanation:
Unoxygenated or oxygen-poor blood is that which comes from tissues that have exchanged O₂ for CO₂. The venous return is in charge of taking that blood to the heart and then to the lungs.
- Oxygen-poor blood reaches the <u>right atrium</u> from the vena cava.
- From the atrium the blood passes to the <u>right ventricle</u> through the tricuspid valve.
- The <u>right ventricle pumps the blood to the lungs</u> through the pulmonary arteries, the only arteries that carry venous blood.
Once in the lungs, the blood exchanges CO₂ for O₂, returning to the heart through the pulmonary veins.
The other options are not correct because:
- <em><u>Left atrium, left ventricle, aorta, body</u></em><em> corresponds to the flow of oxygenated blood that comes from the lungs and is pumped to the entire body.</em>
- <em><u>Left atrium, right atrium, left ventricle, right ventricle</u></em><em> not correspond to the order in which blood flows through the heart.</em>
- <em><u>Right ventricle, right atrium, pulmonary veins, lungs</u></em><em> not correspond to the flow of oxygen-poor blood.</em>
Answer:
"I should avoid using salt substitutes."
Explanation:
The patient, exposed in the question, should avoid salt and its substances in their diet. This is because this patient's kidneys are already very fragile due to illness and salt makes the kidneys even more shaken.
A study at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands focused on 45 patients already suffering from chronic kidney failure, a problem marked by progressive loss of kidney function that causes fatigue, nausea, dry skin, pain… Scientists basically asked for some of the volunteers to reduce their sodium intake over four eight-week periods. The results showed that cutting excess salt decreased the loss of certain proteins in the kidneys, an indicator doctors use to check for disease progression. In fact, another part of the participants received doses of a drug that activates vitamin D receptors, but its effectiveness was much less expressive. That is, the simple act of not abusing the salt in question would be more effective than taking this medicine.
For this reason, we can conclude that a patient who understands that he should avoid salt and substitutes in his diet is well informed about the disease.