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<span>RATIONALE: </span>
<span>The patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) develops a barrel chest over time because trapped air enlarges the lungs and thoracic cavity, thereby reducing chest flexibility. Sunken chest, also known as funnel chest or pectus excavatum, is not related to COPD. Hyperventilation is not characteristically seen with COPD. Instead, the patient usually displays persistent dyspnea on exertion, with or without a chronic cough. Circumoral cyanosis is a bluish discoloration of the skin surrounding the mouth. It is usually an indication of a severely diminished level of oxygen and respiratory distress. Circumoral cyanosis can result from a variety of respiratory diseases and may be a late sign of the COPD disease process.
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No because we dont, it is a rare phenomenon where some animals eyes seem to glow in the dark
It is gotten from the atmosphere by respiration, burning of fossil fuel, decay, excretion and decomposition of organic matter, fossilization etc
The bony landmark that <span>can be felt and seen, and is commonly used to help determine where to give an intramuscular injection on the lateral surface of the thigh is called <u>the greater trochanter.
</u><u />The illiac crest is found on the pelvis, the lateral epicondyle is in the arm, and the remaining options are too small to be felt and seen. So the correct answer has to be the greater trochanter found on the femur, or the thigh bone.<u>
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