The concept of acute anorexia: it is an acute inflammation of the throat and its surroundings, also known as the sonar larynx. The sudden and rapid onset of the disease is characterized by severe throat pains, swallowing and respiratory difficulties, which can lead to suffocation, shock, etc., caused by anaemic haematoma.
Acute inflammation among the population: Adults, children, more men than women. The disease is available throughout the year, with many cases occurring in the early spring and late autumn. In recent years, with the prevalence of haemophilus influenzae type B vaccinations, the annual incidence among children has decreased and the incidence among adults has been relatively stable, but mortality rates are higher than among children because adults are prone to misdiagnosis.
Type of acute anorexia:
Acute infectious anorexia: pathologies caused by bacterial or viral infections. The main manifestation is pain in the throat, which is evident in red and edema, as well as visible pressure on the surrounding tissues, such as the larvae, the nail cartilage and often associated with higher body temperature. Clinical treatment is based on antibiotics and is good. There are three types of manifestations of inflammation:
Acute catatonic type: Illustrative amulatory amulatory blood, oedema and inflammatory swelling;
2 Acute oedema: mucous membrane is predominantly edema, which can be significantly spherical, mesmeric and, in part, swollen.
3 Acute ulcer type: this type is less common, the disease is rapidly and seriously developing, the disease spreads to the depths, and it can result in sepsis and haemorrhage.
2. Acute psychoactive anorexia: pathologies caused by a pathological reaction. It is mainly manifested in a sense of hysteria in the throat, a high edema and generally unchanged temperature. This type of suffocation can be sudden, and failure to save can lead to death. Clinical treatment is dominated by sugar cortex hormone treatment.
Acute anaemic causes:
1. Infection is the most common cause of illness. The most prevalent strains are haemophilus influenzae type B, and other common strains, such as pneumococcus, pneumocococcus, diphtheria fungi, etc., can be mixed with respiratory hysteria virus, nose virus, and influenza type A virus. In addition, neighbouring organizations suffer from infections such as acute tonsilitis, osteoporosis, foot inflammation and nasal inflammation, which can lead to a gradual spread and anaemic mucous membranes.
2. Perverted reaction means the creation of the corresponding immunoglobin (lgE) when the antigen enters the body and re-exposes to the same antigens, when the macrocell is detached, releasing large amounts of vascularly active substances, causing vascular expansion and increasing permeability. Common anti-existing drugs (e.g. aspirin), serum or food (e.g. seafood) etc.
Acute inflammation factors: All kinds of trauma and irritation can lead to inflammational changes in anorexic membranes, such as abdominal stab wounds, larynx injuries; mechanical damage such as endoscopy or bronchial intubation; heat damage such as high-temperature drinks, inhalation of steam; chemical damage such as harmful irritant gases, irritant foods; and radiation damage such as industrial exposure. In addition, reduced physical resistance, old age and acute infectious diseases can induce anaemic inflammation.
Typical symptoms of acute inflammation:
1. Acute infective anorexia: acute, often sudden at night, short, not exceeding 6-12 hours, most patients are normal in their sleep, with sudden pain in their throat or difficulty in breathing in the middle of the night; pain in their throat is the main symptom of the disease. Anorexic osmosis or direct food irritation leads to increased pain in the throat and an outflow of water from the mouth and a reluctance to eat. If the surrounding tissue is swollen, there can be difficulty swallowing;3 respiratory difficulties: because of the high swelling of the anorexic mucous membranes, the entrance to the throat is significantly reduced and the swollen edema is blocking the door, causing respiratory difficulties and suffocation if the condition deteriorates. A small number of patients speak low, vague, but sound normal; 4 cold, fever: fever before an adult has a fever, cold, temperature at 37.5 ~ 39.5 °C, and a small number can be as high as 40 °C. The patient is restless, mentally depressed and infirm. 5 fainting, shock: Patients can faint or go into shock in a short period of time, in the form of respiratory difficulties, infirmity, infirmity, coldness of the limbs, pale skin, reduced blood pressure, etc. Such patients should be closely observed and prepared for rescue.
2. Acute psychoactive anorexia: acute, often occurring within half an hour of medication or 2-3 hours of eating. The disease is highly dangerous and can suddenly suffocate when coughing, inhaling, changing position, and can die if rescue is not timely. The main symptoms are confusion in the sense of congestion in the throat and in the speech, but the sound remains unchanged. The whole-body symptoms are not obvious, and the whole-body check-up is normal for cold, heat, breathing difficulties, pain or stress.
Symptoms of acute inflammation: Special position can be attached to respiratory difficulties, usually with a forward tip, and children can be exposed to a frontal leaning, with their head and nose stretched up. Patients are moody, and the rate of breathing increases with the sound of a blowtorch or a gaseous dent in the body.
Treatment of acute anorexia: The drugs for anorexia are mainly antibiotics and sugary cortex hormones, the main purpose of which is to control the infection, keep the gas tract wet, dilute the sorbent and swollen.
1. Antibiotics: mainly used for the treatment of infectious anorexia, early intravenous drips are effective in controlling inflammation, which is converted to oral after the condition has stabilized. The first drugs of choice are penicillin, head-stamp antibiotics or potassium klawite.
Sugar cortex hormones: resistant to inflammation, allergies, shock, together with treatment and prevention of oedema. Early local treatment of joint hormonal inhalation of antibiotics can reduce edema in the throat and facilitate inflammation.
In addition, inhalation of local drugs, such as the use of the Budined convulsion, is included to maintain the humid, diluted and inflammated gas lanes.
Surgery treatment for acute anorexia:
1. Excretion: An operation in which the patient takes a plumbing position, a pillow cushion under his shoulder, with a larynx to cut open the swollen wall, and extracts the sept quickly, under conditions of oxygen and airways. The pusture should be absorbed at a fast pace, so as to avoid the flow of the pusus and cause other infections. If the puss are expected to be large, most of them can be pumped from an empty needle before they are removed. The procedure applies to patients with local sepsis, which facilitates the rapid control of infection and reduces symptoms. If the disease is spreading, it cannot be removed in order to avoid the spread of inflammation.
2. Establishment of artificial airways: is an important means of ensuring that the patient ‘ s respiratory tract is smooth, and is often used in cases of severe respiratory difficulties at the time of acute onset or in cases where respiratory difficulties are difficult to alleviate.
Post-pregnancy: Acute anaemic treatment is generally better after timely treatment and most patients are curable. In the event of failure to provide timely medical care and delays, the situation is expected to be relatively poor, leading to death.
Home care with acute anorexia:
Patients and family members should be aware of the dangers of the disease and, if suspected of anorexia, can call 120 emergency cases for treatment; until the arrival of a medical staff member, he/she should remain in a semi-seat position in order to alleviate the symptoms; he/she should be actively informed about the disease, free of fear, remain calm and cooperate actively in its treatment; he/she should be free of eating, which is mainly nutritious or semi-food; and he/she should be kept clean of mouths and have daily access to mouthwashing.
(b) The science of the treatment: the disease is more likely to use head spores, the active components of which can be distributed across all parts of the body, so that there is an infection in the various parts of the tissue, which can be used as long as the fungus is sensitive to the skull. It is a bactericide in sufficient concentrations to kill bacteria, unlike tetracyclics, erythrins, and chloroacin microbicides, which, at conventional doses, mainly inhibit bacteria. Thus, head spores can be used for more dangerous infections.
Advantage one: The antibacterial spectrophyllin is relatively broad, and it has a better antibacterial effect on both part of the grelane positive and part of the grelane vaginal bacteria. This means that, for most common pathogens in the clinical sections such as internal medicine, surgery, gynaecology and obstetrics, skin, the hemorrhage is often antibacterium-resistant and is therefore widely used in the clinical field.
Advantage two: Bacteria can produce resistance to antibacterial drugs if they produce enzymes that destroy certain antibacterial drugs, such as bacteria that are resistant to penicillin, and head enzyme that is more stable to bacteria can replace penicillin in killing bacteria. There is also a relatively large number of oral strains of estrogen. This is due to the fact that there are a number of varieties that enter their stomachs after oral administration, and that the stomach acid of the human body is difficult to destroy and the efficacy of the drug is more stable.
Advantage three: The molecular structure of head fungus is similar to that of penicillin and has allergies, but the sensitivity rate is lower than that of penicillin and the incidence of allergy shock is lower.
The above characteristics determine the high clinical practical value of the bacterium.
There are a number of principles to be followed in the use of gills:
Principle 1: No abuse; because of its many advantages, the patient and the doctor favour it and use it as soon as the patient becomes infected, regardless of the type of infection. In particular, the three generations of sprouts, where production is high and the price is quite cheap in our country, have been widespread in the past. In recent years, we have seen the emergence of a number of three generations of vaginal bacteria, such as coli and pneumocococcal, which are already difficult to treat and produce ultra-extreme β-neamide enzymes that can damage the prophylactics of the hemorrhage. The high level of abuse of headgills has led to a significant decrease in the good antibacterial effects that would otherwise have had, and the infections caused by these resistant bacteria are clinically difficult to address.
Principle II: Oral oral and intravenous drug dripping; a number of patients who seek early recovery will voluntarily request a doctor to inject their veins. It’s not right. In the application of head sphinx, there is a heavy trade-off, with relatively light exposure and oral formulations for various generations. The infection is heavy and an IV is optional. Vigilante drops are usually used, with as little as possible. Why? This is due to the adverse effects of the head enzyme, which, if a patient has a severe allergy or other dangerously adverse reaction to it, if extrapolated, the drug has been quickly bled and the doctor is unable to terminate the delivery. The use of dripping, even if it is fast, allows the patient to slow down the dripping rate as soon as there is an adverse reaction, or even to put in a tube and terminate the delivery. Let the doctors get the time to save.
Principle III: Non-mixing with other drugs; in principle, anti-bacterial drugs and any other drug cannot be randomly mixed for delivery, even for the same drug. A patient, for example, can’t have two antibiotics, e.g., e.g., e.g., e.g., e.g., e.g., iv.l.l.l.l. and cyncin. Because various antibacterial drugs have different physicochemical characteristics, they add together, look at the naked eye, the colour remains the same, and perhaps they do not sink, but in fact they may have interacted, reducing their respective antibacterial effects, and even creating new compounds that are harmful to humans. Thus, the application of anti-bacterial drugs must require a single delivery and must not be accompanied by two in one container.
Principle 4: Do not be used before or after drinking, and are highly vulnerable to double-sulphur-like reactions, such as vomiting, shock, fainting and even life-threatening for older persons.