low blood pressure
SN instructed patient and caregiver on some measures aimed to controlling/managing constipation, such as: establish regular times for evacuations usually after a meal and drink a warm liquid one-half hour before breakfast to stimulate bowel movement, avoid laxative and enema abuse. Instructed on some potential complications of constipation, such as: stool impaction bowel blockage, liquid bowel movement may ooze around hard stool in the colon, pain, valsalva maneuver may be caused by straining, causing a slow
ed pulse, decreased blood
return and increased venous pressure, rectal bleeding and rectal pain.
Instructed patient 1 in 4 heart attack and stroke survivors has another. Managing high blood
pressure and cholesterol, making healthy lifestyle choices and taking medications like aspirin as recommended by your doctor, may help low
er your risk of a second event.
SN instructed patient on Nifedipine. You can take nifedipine before or after meals. Do not bite, chew or break the tablets/capsules. When you first start taking nifedipine you may get a headache or feel flushed. These symptoms usually go after a few days.
Instructed patient on how sometimes blood
flow
s with enough force to weaken a vessel wall. If the vessel is small or damaged, the wall can break. When this happens blood
leaks into nearby tissue and kills cells. Other cells may die because blood
cannot reach them.
Patient instructed that Anemia is a condition characterized by an inadequate amount of red blood
cells, which are produced in your bone marrow. Red blood
cells contain hemoglobin, a substance that picks up oxygen from your lungs, carries it throughout your body, and gives it to your cells. Your cells need oxygen to perform the basic functions that generate energy and keep you alive. In addition, hemoglobin picks up some of the carbon dioxide given off by your cells and returns it to the lungs, where it is exhaled when you breathe out. Without enough red blood
cells to transport oxygen to your cells and carbon dioxide away from your cells, your body functions at a less than optimal level.
Patient was instructed on leg edema. The body needs the right amount of blood
flow
to keep the heart pumping, the legs moving and the brain functioning. Blood
circulation, the movement of blood
throughout the body, is clearly crucial to the existence, and poor leg circulation can cause many problems, such as leg edema or leg swelling.
Patient was instructed on how lifestyle and daily routine can affect blood
sugar levels Type of food: food is made up of carbohydrates, protein and fat. Although all three can increase blood
sugar, carbohydrates have the biggest impact.
Patient was instructed on how stress can affect blood
sugar. One way stress affect blood
sugar and having a direct effect on it, is as with the stress of a physical illness, prolonged or excessive stress can cause the body to produce hormones that prevent insulin from working properly. That, in turn, increases the blood
sugar levels.
Patient was instructed on Hyperglycemia. High blood
sugar develops when there is too little insulin or when the body fails to respond properly to the insulin in the blood
. High blood
sugar emergencies often develop because of some underlying condition that may not be obvious, such as a heart attack, infection, or surgery.
Patient was instructed on how stress can affect blood
sugar. Stress can affect blood
sugar in two ways: when under heavy stress, it is easy to abandon the usual routine, eating fewer healthy foods, in that sense, stress indirectly causes the blood
sugar to rise.