The most common side effect of opioid medication is Constipation because they reduce gastrointestinal motility, secretions, and blood flow.
To treat constipation with non- pharmacological therapies, the patient should have a high-fiber diet, increased fluid intake, and increased physical activity.
Due to the condition of the patient, it's not
possible to get rid of the side effects with this type of therapy, so
the nurse will have to prescribe stimulant laxatives to maintain regular
bowel movements.
Answer: LAXITIVES
Answer:
Hyperimmunoglobulinemia E Syndrome
Explanation:
Hyperimmunoglobulinemia E Syndrome or Job syndrome is an immunodeficiency disorder in which the white blood cells are incapable of producing an inflammatory response to infectious organisms. It is an autosomal dominant disorder. It is characterized by recurring bacterial infections, specially of lung and skin. There are also other symptoms like abromalities in vascular or skeletal system and elevated IgE level.
Symptoms like frequent formation of pus pockets in skin, lungs or joints usually begin during infancy. These pus pockets are formed due to infection by staphylococcal bacteria. Treatment usually consists of antibiotics to fight infection and anti histamines to relieve the symptoms like rash and itching. Sometimes drugs can also be administered to modify immune system.
The translocon (commonly known as a translocator or translocation channel) is a complex of proteins associated with the translocation of polypeptides across membranes.[1] In eukaryotes the term translocon most commonly refers to the complex that transports nascent polypeptides with a targeting signal sequence into the interior (cisternal or lumenal) space of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) from the cytosol. This translocation process requires the protein to cross a hydrophobic lipid bilayer. The same complex is also used to integrate nascent proteins into the membrane itself (membrane proteins). In prokaryotes, a similar protein complex transports polypeptides across the plasma membrane or integrates membrane proteins.[2] Bacterial pathogens can also assemble other translocons in their host membranes, allowing them to export virulence factors into their target cells.[3]
The prokaryotic translocon
Sexual Reproduction with the most adapted organisms within the species