Week 4 Case Study: A 55-year-old high school teacher begins experiencing a cough after a parent-teachers conference. Initially it was a mild cough and the teacher thought nothing of it since he had a history of asthma. As he was driving home, the cough became more intense, and he began experiencing chest tightness. He used his rescue inhaler as usual but did not get any relief. Minutes later he began experiencing chest pain, unlike the tightness that he experienced with his asthma. He began to sweat profusely, experience light-headedness and difficulty breathing. He attempted to pull into a park but passed out and struck the curve causing his vehicle to come to a stop. A passerby saw the incident and called 9-1-1. On the scene, the paramedic found the man unconscious. His EKG revealed ST segment elevation in the anterior leads (V3 and V4), his pulse was shallow, and respirations were 10 breaths/min. Upon arrival to the ER, a troponin level was 13ng/l and his CK level was 265 U/L.
Assignment (1- to 2-page case study analysis)
In your Case Study Analysis related to the scenario provided, explain the following
The cardiovascular and cardiopulmonary pathophysiologic processes that result in the patient presenting these symptoms.
Any racial/ethnic variables that may impact physiological functioning.
How these processes interact to affect the patient.
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Resources Needed For this activity, read/review the following resources:
Chapters 7 and 8 of the textbook
Observation
A minimum of one scholarly source is required (in addition to the textbook)
Instructions for the First Post The utility principle entails maximizing happiness as a desired result of decisions. Although it is not stated explicitly, there is an inverse purpose to reduce the negative consequences of calamity. Utilitarian decisions are aimed towards outcomes, or what happens as a result of a decision.
We must examine the outcomes. We begin by examining the real outcomes of an action. We assess if that was the best possible outcome. We can assess the actual findings by comparing them to alternate outcomes that could have been predicted.
If we do not yet have the actual results of