Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Wm Rogers And Son China Silverware



you upload an article in La Vanguardia newspaper on 3/21/2011 talks about past drug use when the kids have a fever.

Behold:

Nuevas Guidelines for the use of Fármacos against fever in children

darse They must fight to discontent, not to arrange a temperature

normal

Josep Corbella have similar efficacy, but combining them (ie, alternating doses of each other) seems even more effective, as the few studies that have examined this issue.

And although the two products are safe when given in adequate doses, it is important not to exceed these doses as in many households to avoid side effects can be severe. These are the main recommendations made by the new document on treatment of fever in the American Academy of Pediatrics ( AAP), presented in the latest issue of the journal Pediatrics. With more than 60,000 members, the AAP is the association of pediatrics world's largest and its recommendations are usually followed by pediatricians from other countries, including Spain. "Fever is not a disease but a physiological mechanism that has beneficial effects in fighting infections," says the document. Among these benefits, the AAP notes that the fever limits the growth of bacteria and viruses and encourages growth of immune cells. On the other hand, often involve a sense of discomfort with irritability, depression and loss of appetite, among other symptoms. Therefore, the goal of treatment should not get a normal temperature but to restore the child's welfare.

Treatment should be administered with acetaminophen or ibuprofen. Aspirin should be avoided, as in children can cause Reye syndrome.

fever due to infection, the AAP notes, does not worsen the course of a disease or have long-term adverse effects. The only situation in which fever is a disease in itself is when a hyperthermia, a rare disorder in which the brain loses its ability to regulate body temperature, for example, after a heat stroke, and can cause neurological damage and death. But this is a distinct febrile reaction which occurs following common infections in childhood.

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