baby fails to cry,an attempt is made to breathe,but there is primary gasps and subsequent raise in heart beat and blood pressure.after one minute there is primary apnoea.it there is no resuscitation,there will be secondary gasps,a flat heart beat and a rapid drop in blood pressure and in five to eight minutes slight brain damage begins.there will be long gasps and long apnoeas and the baby will be acidotic due to low levels of ph in the blood,hypoxia and hypercapnoea.brain damage becomes more severe,there is cerebral oedema and rupture of small blood vessels resulting in cerebral haemorrhage.there is ischaemia of brain cells resulting in severe brain damage.signs are convulsions,inability to suck,baby is more flaccid,cerebral palsy.death then follows as a result of failure to resuscitate.
LOL
at is the pathophysiology what is the pathophysiology of myoma
Perinatal asphyxia
birth asphyxia
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Asphyxia Noir is 5' 7".
Asphyxia leads to the condition known as death.
lockjow, contracture of muscle, hypertonia
pathophysiology of cesarean
there is no pathophysiology for NSD!!
What is the pathophysiology of psychotic disorder?
pathophysiology of anemia in hypothyroidism