Answer:
the answer is c
Athletes should match sweat losses 100%-150%, because the kidneys continually produce urine, thus increasing total water excretion.
Explanation:
Answer:
No, she should use the heel of her palm for the blows.
Explanation:
ANSWER: SEPARATION OF DELICATE EQUIPMENTS/INSTRUMENTS
EXPLANATION: When dealing with equipments paced In a basin for disinfection, the medical assistant should:
1. firstly separate delicate equipments;
2. wash the equipment with soap and clean water;
3. then, rinse the equipment totally with clean water.
4. Lastly, disinfect the equipment to terminate any remaining pathogens on the equipments.
Cardinal motor features of Parkinson's disease (PD) include bradykinesia, rest tremor, and rigidity, which appear in the early stages of the disease and largely depend on dopaminergic nigrostriatal denervation. Intermediate and advanced PD stages are characterized by motor fluctuations and dyskinesia, which depend on complex mechanisms secondary to severe nigrostriatal loss and to the problems related to oral levodopa absorption, and motor and nonmotor symptoms and signs that are secondary to marked dopaminergic loss and multisystem neurodegeneration with damage to nondopaminergic pathways. Nondopaminergic dysfunction results in motor problems, including posture, balance and gait disturbances, and fatigue, and nonmotor problems, encompassing depression, apathy, cognitive impairment, sleep disturbances, pain, and autonomic dysfunction. There are a number of symptomatic drugs for PD motor signs, but the pharmacological resources for nonmotor signs and symptoms are limited, and rehabilitation may contribute to their treatment. The present review will focus on classical notions and recent insights into the neuropathology, neuropharmacology, and neurophysiology of motor dysfunction of PD.