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  2. Management of dehydration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Management_of_dehydration

    Ideally, patients should be reassessed every fifteen to thirty minutes until a strong radial pulse is present, and thereafter, assessed at least hourly to confirm that hydration is improving. Hopefully, patients will graduate to the medium dehydration or "some" dehydration category and receive continued treatment as above.

  3. This Is How Dehydration Can Affect Your Blood Pressure - AOL

    www.aol.com/dehydration-affect-blood-pressure...

    Signs of High Blood Pressure Your blood pressure is considered high when it’s 130/80 mm Hg or higher, according to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute . Many people with high blood ...

  4. Can Dehydration Cause High Blood Pressure? What Experts Say - AOL

    www.aol.com/dehydration-cause-high-blood...

    High blood pressure is when the force of blood against your artery walls is too high when your heart beats. If left untreated, this force can damage the blood vessels and cause heart disease ...

  5. Dehydration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dehydration

    In physiology, dehydration is a lack of total body water that disrupts metabolic processes. [3] It occurs when free water loss exceeds free water intake. This is usually due to excessive sweating, disease, or a lack of access to water. Mild dehydration can also be caused by immersion diuresis, which may increase risk of decompression sickness ...

  6. What Doctors Want You to Know About Drinking Water to Lower ...

    www.aol.com/doctors-want-know-drinking-water...

    One study published in Cureus in 2022 suggested that people with hypertension tended to have lower total body water percentage, suggesting a relationship between hydration status and high blood ...

  7. Fluid replacement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluid_replacement

    Fluid replacement or fluid resuscitation is the medical practice of replenishing bodily fluid lost through sweating, bleeding, fluid shifts or other pathologic processes. . Fluids can be replaced with oral rehydration therapy (drinking), intravenous therapy, rectally such as with a Murphy drip, or by hypodermoclysis, the direct injection of fluid into the subcutaneous tis

  8. Hypovolemic shock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypovolemic_shock

    For example, elderly patients taking beta blockers can alter the patient's physiologic response to decreased blood volume by inhibiting mechanism to increase heart rate. As another, patients with baseline hypertension may be functionally hypotensive with a systolic blood pressure of 110 mmHg.

  9. Oral rehydration therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_rehydration_therapy

    Oral rehydration therapy was developed in the 1940s using electrolyte solutions with or without glucose on an empirical basis chiefly for mild or convalescent patients, but did not come into common use for rehydration and maintenance therapy until after the discovery that glucose promoted sodium and water absorption during cholera in the 1960s. [6]